luc
Enthusiast
Daniel,
Using a knock sensor as a tuning tool on a modified engine can certainly be beneficial but I believe that on a stock engine, the work and money involved to retrofit one, far outweight the (possible) benefit and could even have some performance drawback due to the hysteresis of the sensor.
Not all engines are equal in regard to knock, obviously combustion chamber design, timing map,bore size,CR,Head material,all play a role and it's not because a Mitsubishi with an effective CR of 17 (8 static + 9 turbo/boost)or an LS1 need one that a bone stock viper engine require one.
Luc.00GTS
Using a knock sensor as a tuning tool on a modified engine can certainly be beneficial but I believe that on a stock engine, the work and money involved to retrofit one, far outweight the (possible) benefit and could even have some performance drawback due to the hysteresis of the sensor.
Not all engines are equal in regard to knock, obviously combustion chamber design, timing map,bore size,CR,Head material,all play a role and it's not because a Mitsubishi with an effective CR of 17 (8 static + 9 turbo/boost)or an LS1 need one that a bone stock viper engine require one.
Luc.00GTS