Hi Jack,
I guess if you can start the car and do the pull(s) before the PCM senses that one of the primary O2's is not sending out a signal within the preset range, it would be ok. If the car was run for even a few minutes (total) in closed loop, I would suspect the PCM could set a pending code and / or begin adjusting fuel on that one bank. I kind of saw it as a similar situation as what those with 2000 and newer PCM's encounter, rich mixture and code when one or both oxygen sensors don't heat up fast enough with headers. It would be interesting to test on a 2000 or newer model.
Otherwise, I don't see anybody disagreeing with the good sense it makes to dyno with air / fuel monitoring. The dynojet we use does not have one (not all do), so we use our FJO unit with RPM input and logging.
Best regards,
Sean
I guess if you can start the car and do the pull(s) before the PCM senses that one of the primary O2's is not sending out a signal within the preset range, it would be ok. If the car was run for even a few minutes (total) in closed loop, I would suspect the PCM could set a pending code and / or begin adjusting fuel on that one bank. I kind of saw it as a similar situation as what those with 2000 and newer PCM's encounter, rich mixture and code when one or both oxygen sensors don't heat up fast enough with headers. It would be interesting to test on a 2000 or newer model.
Otherwise, I don't see anybody disagreeing with the good sense it makes to dyno with air / fuel monitoring. The dynojet we use does not have one (not all do), so we use our FJO unit with RPM input and logging.
Best regards,
Sean