ZR1 Less than 900 RWHP on Dyno, but we found out why
Last edited by m103114; Yesterday at 01:52 PM.
I used the same mixture in my bone stock 24 z06 countless times without any problems whatsoever. Anyone know why?
Also, I pumped 4 5 gallon jugs of the stuff as well and put some in my AMG GLC63 to test it and there were no problems. I'm too scared to put it in my ZR1 again for now.
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I think one can of VP octane boost per tank will raise you up to 94-95 octane and the car will be happy.
I used the same mixture in my bone stock 24 z06 countless times without any problems whatsoever. Anyone know why?
Another possible theory is that the 100 octane was achieved by heavily mixing in ethanol and that threw off the cal enough to cause you issues. The car can compensate for e15, maybe e20 on stock boost- but anything over that she's likely to run out of injector. To get base 91 to 100 you're looking at e30-e40. Probably not enough injector to compensate for that
Last edited by arthursc2; Yesterday at 01:04 PM.
Another possible theory is that the 100 octane was achieved by heavily mixing in ethanol and that threw off the cal enough to cause you issues. The car can compensate for e15, maybe e20 on stock boost- but anything over that she's likely to run out of injector. To get base 91 to 100 you're looking at e30-e40. Probably not enough injector to compensate for that
that's kind of why I was posting it in here. Kind of a heads up, kind of a question as to why. It never gave me any problems in my z06, but my ZR1 went basically into limp mode when I used it.
Octane alone didn't cause your problems. Bad fuel or how they got that octane rating (mixing in E) are the most likely answers
its good to post your experience and results, esp as a CYA, but you don't seem too interested in finding the solution to the problem, just want to blame the fact it was 100 octane, cry wolf and warn others away from it
Octane alone didn't cause your problems. Bad fuel or how they got that octane rating (mixing in E) are the most likely answers
its good to post your experience and results, esp as a CYA, but you don't seem too interested in finding the solution to the problem, just want to blame the fact it was 100 octane, cry wolf and warn others away from it
dude calm down im simply asking and all youre saying is it cannot be this even though every test ive done shows that is, in fact, this, with no other explanation. i was simply trying to share my experience of troubleshooting by pouring the exact same gas into my GLC63, not sure why you went into attack mode, but whatever. thanks for your "help" i guess. I am interested in finding the solution, but all you say is "bad gas" and then proceed to talk ****. Not sure how that helps at all. The bad gas works in every other car. I was trying to see if anyone else has tried this with their ZR1 to see if there is a problem with using 100 octane somehow since it didn't affect my z06 or Mercedes. I'm so sorry for inconveniencing you, please forgive me.
Last edited by chrisM916vette; Yesterday at 11:16 PM.
Working theories include (as previously stated)
-Bad gas (lol) to include too high of water content
-Bad gas (lol) to include too high E content
^ both the above will cause a lean condition, ESPECIALLY if injector margin is too low
-Not enough injector or tune margin in the ZR1 to accommodate less than perfect fuel conditions
-Compression ratio too high to accommodate for lean conditions
-Chamber design not tolerant of knock
You other vehicles may have been fine on the fuel for a plethora of reasons. Different quality of fuel at time of purchase, both cars have enough injector to manage higher E content, the Z06 for sure isn't boosted- so it's not dealing with that, chamber designs could be different, tunes are certainly different, load on engines are different... its a long list
100 octane by itself won't cause issues. Airplanes with 8:1 compressions run on 100 octane. The issue lies in how they achieved that 100 octane for your locality, or whether or not the fuel was contaminated with (most likely) water and how the ZR1 handles sub-par fuel conditions
Ways we can actually test this: data log injector duty cycle and compare to a/f ratio, test fuel for water and ethanol content
Either way, if the car knocked that hard- it wouldn't be a bad idea to pull plugs and check the gap. When engines detonate hard enough, they can collapse the strap of the spark plug. Probably been too long now, but another test you could have done would have been to pull a plug and look for speckling on it- another indicator of detonation
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