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Matt@obsidian



Member Since: 29 Oct 2011
Location: Greater Manchester
Posts: 70

England 2003 Range Rover Autobiography 4.4 V8 Zambezi Silver
Remaps on V8 petrols?

I keep being told it's only done on diesels? Is there really that little to be gained on a petrol engine? I really thought it would be tailor made for some fettling for mpg and acceleration Range Rover 4.4 V8 Autobiography
Mustang Mach 1 (1971 in grabber green)
Honda civic 2.2 diesel
VW crafter with ICE

Post #94496 25th Nov 2011 9:00pm
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ric355



Member Since: 02 May 2011
Location: Surrey, UK
Posts: 302

What made you think that?

There are gains to be had, but by comparison with a turbo diesel engine they will always be smaller percentage wise. This is because it's easy to increase the amount of air that can flow into the cylinders on the TD by increasing the turbo boost pressure. Then just add the right amount of fuel to retain the correct mixture and you get a bigger bang.

On a normally aspirated engine you can't easily increase the airflow without extensive modifications, so the only thing you can do is recover losses already present in the existing map - maybe for economy or emissions reasons, and maybe sharpen up the throttle response as well.

Post #94499 25th Nov 2011 9:26pm
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Matt@obsidian



Member Since: 29 Oct 2011
Location: Greater Manchester
Posts: 70

England 2003 Range Rover Autobiography 4.4 V8 Zambezi Silver

ric355 wrote:
What made you think that?

There are gains to be had, but by comparison with a turbo diesel engine they will always be smaller percentage wise. This is because it's easy to increase the amount of air that can flow into the cylinders on the TD by increasing the turbo boost pressure. Then just add the right amount of fuel to retain the correct mixture and you get a bigger bang.

On a normally aspirated engine you can't easily increase the airflow without extensive modifications, so the only thing you can do is recover losses already present in the existing map - maybe for economy or emissions reasons, and maybe sharpen up the throttle response as well.


Thanks for the response. It's just 3 different places have said they only do diesels so I assumed petrols couldn't be done. So it's just very little gains to be had then? Range Rover 4.4 V8 Autobiography
Mustang Mach 1 (1971 in grabber green)
Honda civic 2.2 diesel
VW crafter with ICE

Post #94503 25th Nov 2011 9:38pm
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ric355



Member Since: 02 May 2011
Location: Surrey, UK
Posts: 302

I find superchips is always a reasonable guide to what the likely gains can be. Here's the V8 petrol gain from them. They use a conservative mapping strategy usually but even if you assume the aggressive version could return twice as much power (and it definitely won't - more like 1 more bhp!) then the gains are still pitiful:

http://www.superchips.co.uk/search?make=17...riant=1067

Post #94505 25th Nov 2011 9:47pm
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daveo



Member Since: 21 Oct 2009
Location: london
Posts: 2307

United Kingdom 2004 Range Rover Autobiography 4.4 V8 Java Black

hi, heres his number, tell him dave gave you his number and you was told it was 175 inc postage back, you wont find remapping that cheap any were.., he does two types of maps, eco for better mpg and sport, you will always get more bhp out of the diesel hi, send him your ecu and he will flash the eprom and then he will send it back recorded.
here is his web site.www.drka.co.uk
dave
07578261689 (lewis) V8 facelift Range Rover Autobiography 22" wheels.
1976 Harley Davidson Iron Head Sportster

Post #94519 25th Nov 2011 11:09pm
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Trist78



Member Since: 07 May 2011
Location: Worcester
Posts: 78

2004 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Java Black

Has anyone had theirs done on the petrol ??

I know 12 bhp gain is it really worth it ?

How much more mpg can you get ?

Post #94528 26th Nov 2011 12:07am
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bogie



Member Since: 06 Nov 2010
Location: Notts/Sth Yorks/Lincs border
Posts: 208

United Kingdom 2004 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Java Black

havnt bothered for reasons stated

on a 2.5 ton car with 290bhp you are not going to notice 12bhp difference....you can barely notice 12bph on a 750kg Lotus Elise Wink

forced induction engines are better of course, so diesels or supercharged/turbo can see noticable gains cheers
bogie

Post #94546 26th Nov 2011 10:41am
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KurtVerbose



Member Since: 08 Aug 2010
Location: Les Arses
Posts: 5848

Switzerland 2007 Range Rover Vogue TDV8 Stornoway Grey

ric355 wrote:
There are gains to be had, but by comparison with a turbo diesel engine they will always be smaller percentage wise. This is because it's easy to increase the amount of air that can flow into the cylinders on the TD by increasing the turbo boost pressure. Then just add the right amount of fuel to retain the correct mixture and you get a bigger bang.


Most, if not all, chipping companies aren't increasing the boost pressure. They're just burning air that's already there. They just get closer to the edge of complete combustion than the manufactures go.

Post #94562 26th Nov 2011 1:00pm
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BigJ



Member Since: 16 Mar 2011
Location: North Yorkshire
Posts: 247

United Kingdom 2005 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Stornoway Grey

KurtVerbose wrote:
ric355 wrote:
There are gains to be had, but by comparison with a turbo diesel engine they will always be smaller percentage wise. This is because it's easy to increase the amount of air that can flow into the cylinders on the TD by increasing the turbo boost pressure. Then just add the right amount of fuel to retain the correct mixture and you get a bigger bang.


Most, if not all, chipping companies aren't increasing the boost pressure. They're just burning air that's already there. They just get closer to the edge of complete combustion than the manufactures go.


Sorry I call b0llocks on this one. I own my own tuning company and I certainly raise boost pressure with a large amount of other maps.

I remapped my 4.4 M62 engine and it responded very well. The new owner had a 02 4.4 V8 and he noticed the difference as soon as he jumped into mine. Used to have:
2005 FFRR 4.4 Vogue - BRC LPG Conversion & Remapped

Now have:
2008 SSRR 3.6 TDV8 - HSE and plenty of toys

Post #94651 26th Nov 2011 9:26pm
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Matt@obsidian



Member Since: 29 Oct 2011
Location: Greater Manchester
Posts: 70

England 2003 Range Rover Autobiography 4.4 V8 Zambezi Silver

BigJ wrote:
KurtVerbose wrote:
ric355 wrote:
There are gains to be had, but by comparison with a turbo diesel engine they will always be smaller percentage wise. This is because it's easy to increase the amount of air that can flow into the cylinders on the TD by increasing the turbo boost pressure. Then just add the right amount of fuel to retain the correct mixture and you get a bigger bang.


Most, if not all, chipping companies aren't increasing the boost pressure. They're just burning air that's already there. They just get closer to the edge of complete combustion than the manufactures go.


Sorry I call b0llocks on this one. I own my own tuning company and I certainly raise boost pressure with a large amount of other maps.

I remapped my 4.4 M62 engine and it responded very well. The new owner had a 02 4.4 V8 and he noticed the difference as soon as he jumped into mine.


So what are your expected gains then on the 4.4 V8? I am more interested on mpg but extra power is always welcomed Range Rover 4.4 V8 Autobiography
Mustang Mach 1 (1971 in grabber green)
Honda civic 2.2 diesel
VW crafter with ICE

Post #94652 26th Nov 2011 9:30pm
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ric355



Member Since: 02 May 2011
Location: Surrey, UK
Posts: 302

BigJ wrote:

Sorry I call b0llocks on this one. I own my own tuning company and I certainly raise boost pressure with a large amount of other maps.


Glad you posted that; I felt it was incorrect but had no actual evidence to back up my understanding.

Post #94669 26th Nov 2011 10:30pm
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Trist78



Member Since: 07 May 2011
Location: Worcester
Posts: 78

2004 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Java Black

How about the air filters and all that would that make any if not at all.?

Post #94722 27th Nov 2011 3:27pm
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BigJ



Member Since: 16 Mar 2011
Location: North Yorkshire
Posts: 247

United Kingdom 2005 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Stornoway Grey

Matt@obsidian wrote:
BigJ wrote:
KurtVerbose wrote:
ric355 wrote:
There are gains to be had, but by comparison with a turbo diesel engine they will always be smaller percentage wise. This is because it's easy to increase the amount of air that can flow into the cylinders on the TD by increasing the turbo boost pressure. Then just add the right amount of fuel to retain the correct mixture and you get a bigger bang.


Most, if not all, chipping companies aren't increasing the boost pressure. They're just burning air that's already there. They just get closer to the edge of complete combustion than the manufactures go.


Sorry I call b0llocks on this one. I own my own tuning company and I certainly raise boost pressure with a large amount of other maps.

I remapped my 4.4 M62 engine and it responded very well. The new owner had a 02 4.4 V8 and he noticed the difference as soon as he jumped into mine.


So what are your expected gains then on the 4.4 V8? I am more interested on mpg but extra power is always welcomed


Hi Matt, 12-15bhp max, but it's the way it drives and comes onto the power works better I found. The accelerator pedal does feel as if it has a huge amount of travel.

MPG you will not notice anything on the V8, best way is to LPG it. Mine was.

THe gains arn't as huge as in the TD6, TDV8 etc, but welcomed. It picks up better and has more midrange power. Used to have:
2005 FFRR 4.4 Vogue - BRC LPG Conversion & Remapped

Now have:
2008 SSRR 3.6 TDV8 - HSE and plenty of toys

Post #94754 27th Nov 2011 6:52pm
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Matt@obsidian



Member Since: 29 Oct 2011
Location: Greater Manchester
Posts: 70

England 2003 Range Rover Autobiography 4.4 V8 Zambezi Silver

Cheers big j. The LPG will be next year, was just curious if there was anything tobegained before hand. Thanks again


BigJ wrote:
Matt@obsidian wrote:
BigJ wrote:
KurtVerbose wrote:
ric355 wrote:
There are gains to be had, but by comparison with a turbo diesel engine they will always be smaller percentage wise. This is because it's easy to increase the amount of air that can flow into the cylinders on the TD by increasing the turbo boost pressure. Then just add the right amount of fuel to retain the correct mixture and you get a bigger bang.


Most, if not all, chipping companies aren't increasing the boost pressure. They're just burning air that's already there. They just get closer to the edge of complete combustion than the manufactures go.


Sorry I call b0llocks on this one. I own my own tuning company and I certainly raise boost pressure with a large amount of other maps.

I remapped my 4.4 M62 engine and it responded very well. The new owner had a 02 4.4 V8 and he noticed the difference as soon as he jumped into mine.


So what are your expected gains then on the 4.4 V8? I am more interested on mpg but extra power is always welcomed


Hi Matt, 12-15bhp max, but it's the way it drives and comes onto the power works better I found. The accelerator pedal does feel as if it has a huge amount of travel.

MPG you will not notice anything on the V8, best way is to LPG it. Mine was.

THe gains arn't as huge as in the TD6, TDV8 etc, but welcomed. It picks up better and has more midrange power.
 Range Rover 4.4 V8 Autobiography
Mustang Mach 1 (1971 in grabber green)
Honda civic 2.2 diesel
VW crafter with ICE

Post #94757 27th Nov 2011 7:01pm
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