My statement of sounding stock was not directed toward exhaust, it was directed toward the whine of the superchargers.
That's what I assumed, but hey, if you're exhaust is loud enough it'll cover up the blower whine anyway!
My statement of sounding stock was not directed toward exhaust, it was directed toward the whine of the superchargers.
That's what I assumed, but hey, if you're exhaust is loud enough it'll cover up the blower whine anyway!
a roe sc viper does not have an intercooler
Houston, you have a problem.
What problem would that be? Works just fine.
The title is misleading. It's not the cream-puff going "pop" - it's your "pushing the limits" that went down the gutter.
The Viper engines are terrible reliable - under normal operation - plenty of +100.000 miles cars out there
........... The VEC does not have knock sensors and a car with a modified exhaust is too loud to detect detonation.
..........
Thanks for the info. I'm gonna be installing my Greg Good heads/cam soon and was woundering if the 2.8 was worth it. I think I'm going to stick with the 2.4 and my 10lb pulley.
Thanks for the info. I'm gonna be installing my Greg Good heads/cam soon and was woundering if the 2.8 was worth it. I think I'm going to stick with the 2.4 and my 10lb pulley.
Do you mind letting me konw how much the GG heads/cam set you back? I might be in the market.
Well, I went with with what GG recommended for the most part given the limitations with the stock valves (can't get more than .600 total lift on stock valves)...114 LSA with moderate lift on the intake (.575), more lift on the exhaust (.598), and longer duration. I think my biggest issue is with the solid roller set-up. It does not allow as much dwell between open/closing since there is less "slack" to take up in the valve train. When it warms-up, I'm running about .014 lash. Cold its .002 so you can see how the cam dynamics change with hot vs. cold operations. Now I have to say the engine really rev's a lot free-er and faster but there is a trade-off in some drivability. The aluminum flywheel might also impact the bucking and surging as well. I never had any with the stock cam/hydralic lifters. And finally, throw the issue of not having the right tune into the equation and you can see how I might have some low speed drivability issue. A good SCT tune would probably eliminate a lot of my closed-loop drivability issues.
Absolutely Jack. I know during cold start, the stock PCM tune transitions from start enrichment into closed loop way to fast forcing my idle to drop before the "cam" is warmed-up. What I need is about 1500 RPM until engine temp is 140+ and then drop idle to around 850. I can pull about 15 inches of vacuum at 1500 and when warm at idle, I'm right at 10. COld start idle is terrible and the ROE bypass is fluttering on/off since vacuum is under 5 inches.