Hi
Grrrmachine wrote:I'd love to know more! Do you just bolt the engine up to a big electric motor and spin it round at maximum revs?
Its bolted to an eddy current dynamometer, basically it controls the speed by providing an opposing force; so you hold the engine at 3000rpm and alter the throttle position which enables the engine to be mapped; ie change the fuel, ignition, etc... I make the frames and run the dynamometers whilst in this case Phil from GG motorsport is doing the mapping. It then can be run against a transient dynamometer or rolling road to set the transient sections, ie when running through the rpm at differing throttle loads. There is a good article on both mapping and dynamometers on Wikipedia which is far better than my piss poor explaination.
Yes it is Chris Harris's engine for his car, the guy doing the mapping is a good custmer of ours. Should be interesting to see it work....
Thanks
Chris