cwalker2
Registered
This is a great comparison. I see many people post their shops print outs and they are often in STD. The STD factor is about 4% higher than the current SAE standard. STD corrects back to a cooler temperatute and higher barometric pressure. Therefore the print out is saying, "Under these nearly perfect conditions your bike made X hp." SAE is corrected to a hotter temp and is therefore lower by 1% right away based on that fact. The lower baro pressure makes up most of the next 3% difference.
The one thing I'd like to add is that the problem with the Dynojet dynos is that they are NOT accurate. Many say how they are the most accurate. They are often repeatable, but certainly not accurate. Back when Mark Dobeck first developed the DJ100 dyno, he was upset that his dyno didn't read 119hp for a stock 1985 Yamaha V-Max. It read in the 90's. He was missing some very big factors (two bevel drives, countless bearings and flex couplings, fluidic drag as well as rear wheel inertia) trying to obtain a reading similar to a water brake dyno run directly off the output shaft of the transmission . Thus the Dynojet's have inflated numbers in order to match the 119 the magazines measured on the Kerker and Webco dynos. They've changed the factors several times over the years, but never returned to zero inflation.
I've owned a DJ Model 100 since the old DOS software days. I tested back to back revision of software and it was surprising how a new revision would read higher or lower than the previous when run back to back within minutes of the previous run using the same correction factors. I worked closely with the folks at Dynostar when they were trying to figure out the methodology employed for their inflation factor. Adding 20 hp was incorrect as 5 hp minibikes would test at 25 hp. Adding an inflation % didn't work because 300 hp bikes would become 360 375 hp bikes. They seemed to have a factor that increased up to a certain % based on hp measured and then a decrease in % after a certain point in order to keep numbers from getting too big. Absolutely crazy.
Factory Pro, Land & Sea and Superflow read lower than DJ as they never tried to make their units read 119 hp for the '85 V-Max.
It's been posted many times before, but Dobeck's confession is here:
The Story Behind the Dynojet Chassis Dyno - The Truth Meter - Hot Rod Magazine
The one thing I'd like to add is that the problem with the Dynojet dynos is that they are NOT accurate. Many say how they are the most accurate. They are often repeatable, but certainly not accurate. Back when Mark Dobeck first developed the DJ100 dyno, he was upset that his dyno didn't read 119hp for a stock 1985 Yamaha V-Max. It read in the 90's. He was missing some very big factors (two bevel drives, countless bearings and flex couplings, fluidic drag as well as rear wheel inertia) trying to obtain a reading similar to a water brake dyno run directly off the output shaft of the transmission . Thus the Dynojet's have inflated numbers in order to match the 119 the magazines measured on the Kerker and Webco dynos. They've changed the factors several times over the years, but never returned to zero inflation.
I've owned a DJ Model 100 since the old DOS software days. I tested back to back revision of software and it was surprising how a new revision would read higher or lower than the previous when run back to back within minutes of the previous run using the same correction factors. I worked closely with the folks at Dynostar when they were trying to figure out the methodology employed for their inflation factor. Adding 20 hp was incorrect as 5 hp minibikes would test at 25 hp. Adding an inflation % didn't work because 300 hp bikes would become 360 375 hp bikes. They seemed to have a factor that increased up to a certain % based on hp measured and then a decrease in % after a certain point in order to keep numbers from getting too big. Absolutely crazy.
Factory Pro, Land & Sea and Superflow read lower than DJ as they never tried to make their units read 119 hp for the '85 V-Max.
It's been posted many times before, but Dobeck's confession is here:
The Story Behind the Dynojet Chassis Dyno - The Truth Meter - Hot Rod Magazine