RC Viper
Enthusiast
Recently I had the opportunity to attend a Dyno day with the Carolina's
VCA. We had 3 2003 SRT 10s in attendance. All of the cars had minimal modifications so we had a good opportunity to compare the dyno results stock car to stock car. My SRT was one of the valve recall cars so I was anxious to
dyno the car after the fix. It had dynoed at only 424 HP last year prior to the valve replacement and I was really looking for some improvement.
The good news is that all three cars dynoed within around 10 horsepower of each other (one car had a muffler and cat removed and got high 430's) and had similar HP, Torque, and Air to fuel curves. From this you would assume that they were running according to factory specs.
The bad news is that this was not that impressive. Perhaps we are all spoiled by the under-rated Gen II cars. My car dynoed at 430.56 HP and 478.15 torque. If you use a 12% loss value this is only 482.22 HP and even using a 15% factor it is still only 495 HP. While I would like to have seen higher numbers, the purpose of this thread is not to complain. Instead I am concerned about the Air to fuel ratios that we all saw. They were extremely RICH. The Dyno operator immediately picked up on this. The curve passed over "ideal" at about 3700 RPMs and went down hill from there. By 5000 RPM's it was down to around 10.5. This is barely on the scale of the Dyno chart.
Are other owners seeing the same type of A/F ratios on the car? I'm sure that if the car ran a bit leaner it would improve the Hp and Torque ratings. Does anyone know if this if the SRT 10 was designed to run this rich? It is MUCH richer than my Gen II car.
VCA. We had 3 2003 SRT 10s in attendance. All of the cars had minimal modifications so we had a good opportunity to compare the dyno results stock car to stock car. My SRT was one of the valve recall cars so I was anxious to
dyno the car after the fix. It had dynoed at only 424 HP last year prior to the valve replacement and I was really looking for some improvement.
The good news is that all three cars dynoed within around 10 horsepower of each other (one car had a muffler and cat removed and got high 430's) and had similar HP, Torque, and Air to fuel curves. From this you would assume that they were running according to factory specs.
The bad news is that this was not that impressive. Perhaps we are all spoiled by the under-rated Gen II cars. My car dynoed at 430.56 HP and 478.15 torque. If you use a 12% loss value this is only 482.22 HP and even using a 15% factor it is still only 495 HP. While I would like to have seen higher numbers, the purpose of this thread is not to complain. Instead I am concerned about the Air to fuel ratios that we all saw. They were extremely RICH. The Dyno operator immediately picked up on this. The curve passed over "ideal" at about 3700 RPMs and went down hill from there. By 5000 RPM's it was down to around 10.5. This is barely on the scale of the Dyno chart.
Are other owners seeing the same type of A/F ratios on the car? I'm sure that if the car ran a bit leaner it would improve the Hp and Torque ratings. Does anyone know if this if the SRT 10 was designed to run this rich? It is MUCH richer than my Gen II car.