A
enuff_zed said:Statistics eh?
On the face of your bald figures mine actually looks pretty poor in torque, which is the exact opposite of what I'm feeling through my backside.
But then, when you look closer you can see that I am getting almost all of that increase from as low as 1900rpm, which pre-remap was only about 240Nm. Therefore, for my driving style, the increase of nigh on 50% torque at such low rpm, then maintaining that right through to 5000rpm, is a massive improvement.
I was taken aback when I first saw your chart, because I thought I must be experiencing some kind of placebo effect. The real world truth though is that my car now feels torque-ily responsive as soon as I look at the pedal, giving a driving sensation not unlike that from my 335D (ok, not quite that grunt, but hopefully you'll know what I mean).
Still happy with it, that's the main thing![]()
Ah, but Celtic quoted me £360 to come to my door.Jasonn said:I was looking at a celtic or quantum remap as my car is standard so a generic remap might be sufficient rather than needing to pay the extra for a dyno - it'll have to wait until I've changed the tyres & full service first
Don't tell Celtic if they provide generic maps, they won't be very impressed...... I told them I thought they did, it didnt go down very well at all......Jasonn said:I was looking at a celtic or quantum remap as my car is standard so a generic remap might be sufficient rather than needing to pay the extra for a dyno - it'll have to wait until I've changed the tyres & full service first
If all celtic do is come to your house and put a map on your car without taking it on the road or put on a dyno it is exactly that, a generic map.mcbutler said:Don't tell Celtic if they provide generic maps, they won't be very impressed...... I told them I thought they did, it didnt go down very well at all......Jasonn said:I was looking at a celtic or quantum remap as my car is standard so a generic remap might be sufficient rather than needing to pay the extra for a dyno - it'll have to wait until I've changed the tyres & full service first
R.E92 said:You can put a generic map on a dyno too. You're not getting a bespoke map on the N20 from any supplier mentioned here. The dyno part is just effectively a diagnostic tool to ensure the car is running right.
enuff_zed said:R.E92 said:You can put a generic map on a dyno too. You're not getting a bespoke map on the N20 from any supplier mentioned here. The dyno part is just effectively a diagnostic tool to ensure the car is running right.
You have made a bit of an assumption there I think. I received more than a basic remap and blast.
enuff_zed said:R.E92 said:You can put a generic map on a dyno too. You're not getting a bespoke map on the N20 from any supplier mentioned here. The dyno part is just effectively a diagnostic tool to ensure the car is running right.
You have made a bit of an assumption there I think. I received more than a basic remap and blast.
R.E92 said:enuff_zed said:R.E92 said:You can put a generic map on a dyno too. You're not getting a bespoke map on the N20 from any supplier mentioned here. The dyno part is just effectively a diagnostic tool to ensure the car is running right.
You have made a bit of an assumption there I think. I received more than a basic remap and blast.
They might tell you that that they built a custom tune for the car but the whole remapping market is a bit cloudy in that regard. It's mostly sales BS. If you paid £300-£500~, were on the rollers for under 2 hours and left with a printed graph in hand and absolutely no idea what they changed then the chances are you just had the same service that the vast majority of customers get.
For a bespoke map they would at least have to work with you over a few drive cycles and do part throttle work rather than just a couple of full throttle dyno runs.
Typically the only people that bother with a custom map are people that track their cars or do some semi competitive autocross style driving. You would work with a tuner over a much longer period sending them operating data of the vehicle and they would gradually tweak the car.
That kind of work gets expensive so you either pay a real tuner to work with you or you learn it yourself.
A lot of these places may have been set up by people that started by tuning their own vehicles and moved on to doing the £300 garage remap game to pay the bills. All of the tuners on the N54 platform that offer fully custom maps all started with their own cars.
Pbondar said:All noted chaps..mine is back in to The Peformance Centre tomorrow to have the inlet valve ports cleaned and a post clean dyno run..by then plenty of new 99 RON fuel will have washed though..so we will see what gives..it will be a cooler / damp day tomorrow so expecting at least another 25BHP.. :rofl:
Pbondar said:All noted chaps..mine is back in to The Peformance Centre tomorrow to have the inlet valve ports cleaned and a post clean dyno run..by then plenty of new 99 RON fuel will have washed though..so we will see what gives..it will be a cooler / damp day tomorrow so expecting at least another 25BHP.. :rofl:
Don't forget about another 30LBFT of torque too! Don't leave without it! :rofl:
enuff_zed said:Yup, it appears the only consistent thing is the number of variables!
Mine was topped to the brim with V-Power, having been running on that since the Spring.
However, the plugs I ordered didn't arrive in time, so it ran on the old ones, which I believe are the originals, with 24k on them.
New air filter fitted.
I expect even if you took two identical cars, with identical mileage, fitted exactly the same new plugs, air filters, oil change, same wheels, same tyres, same pressures etc, you would still get differences in the graphs.