TT5.9mag
Two atmospheres are better than one
I think @Rat Bastid has his dyno up and running. Maybe we could convince him to do some MAB testing on the next engine he loads up.
Has a lot to do with the combination. If you’re on the edge of detonation a little richer can help but it should start out fairly close to stoichiometric at idle and get gradually leaner under “light” acceleration. So 14.3-14.8 idle, 14.5-15.0 light accel, and go pretty rich as load and rpm increase. 12.6-13.2 or so at wot full load.What would one consider to be a safe AFR limit under light acceleration say from a dead stop to 40 mph.
With something hot rodded or even old school factory performance cam etc, the AFR load illustration from Larew provides a pretty good idea. I've reposted it here (FABO) but you canWhat would one consider to be a safe AFR limit under light acceleration say from a dead stop to 40 mph.
I'd say a lot of these cars will not tolerate such lean mixes under part throttle due to cam and fuel distribution.Has a lot to do with the combination. If you’re on the edge of detonation a little richer can help but it should start out fairly close to stoichiometric at idle and get gradually leaner under “light” acceleration. So 14.3-14.8 idle, 14.5-15.0 light accel, and go pretty rich as load and rpm increase. 12.6-13.2 or so at wot full load.
Well it was an open question so you gave the answer from what you are most familiar with, which I think is a little broader and more modern.I guess I should have clarified and started that post with, “in a perfect world…….” But @Mattax is correct, intake manifold design and cam timing events will make a huge difference in what the engine will tolerate