Bolt on power info?
power doesnt matter to much (well kind of i guess) in a field.. mainly traction and weight.. but then again diesels weigh upwards of 8,000 pounds.. but anyway.. take out a 10,000 dollar loan and invest in a supercharger, 295 m/t's, 4.10 gears along with a stroker kit.. that'll show them diesels
ORIGINAL: TMS Bill
From KRC Performance:
Your timing is set initially by the crankshaft sensor and the distributor has the camshaft sensor in it to determine when the injectors fire relative to the amount of valve opening. So moving the distributor does not affect base timing. But moving the crankshaft sensor relative to it's current position does. The trick is this, and takes about one hour. This will work on any Dodge truck 92- to present except for the 4.7L or the V-10.
Remove the crankshaft sensor on the aft/passenger side of the block. It is held down by (2) 1/2" bolts and pulls out of the tranny bell housing when loose. There is a rubber grommet in the bell housing also, remove it. Now look at the sensor's bracket, notice the 2 bolt holes. Slot each hole 3/8" both ways, still giving the bolts something to hold onto. Then insert the sensor back into the bell housing, making sure you pulled out the rubber grommet. Thread the 2 bolts back in loose, then slide the sensor as far as it can, towards the oil filter, away from the intake. This will advance, moving it towards the intake in the same direction of crank rotation and will retard the base timing; do not do this unless your teenager is driving the truck. It will usually be limited by the bell housing how far you can move it. If you are really brave, grind the bell housing and fab a new adjustable bracket. This will add 3-4 degrees of timing across the whole board of advance tables.
ORIGINAL: mopar98
I always use 4 low and what is the crank sensor mod?
I always use 4 low and what is the crank sensor mod?
Your timing is set initially by the crankshaft sensor and the distributor has the camshaft sensor in it to determine when the injectors fire relative to the amount of valve opening. So moving the distributor does not affect base timing. But moving the crankshaft sensor relative to it's current position does. The trick is this, and takes about one hour. This will work on any Dodge truck 92- to present except for the 4.7L or the V-10.
Remove the crankshaft sensor on the aft/passenger side of the block. It is held down by (2) 1/2" bolts and pulls out of the tranny bell housing when loose. There is a rubber grommet in the bell housing also, remove it. Now look at the sensor's bracket, notice the 2 bolt holes. Slot each hole 3/8" both ways, still giving the bolts something to hold onto. Then insert the sensor back into the bell housing, making sure you pulled out the rubber grommet. Thread the 2 bolts back in loose, then slide the sensor as far as it can, towards the oil filter, away from the intake. This will advance, moving it towards the intake in the same direction of crank rotation and will retard the base timing; do not do this unless your teenager is driving the truck. It will usually be limited by the bell housing how far you can move it. If you are really brave, grind the bell housing and fab a new adjustable bracket. This will add 3-4 degrees of timing across the whole board of advance tables.
i dont know anything about dodges, but i would have to interject here....dont do that if your planning a tune for 93 octane, or any upgraded octane for that matter.
Personally i would let the computer play with the timing.
The stock computer doesn't know what 91/93 octane is. You cannot take advantage of the higher octane without modding the control system in some manner. Advancing the timing on a motor is an age old mod. This is how it's done on our motors (V6/V8 only).
Re: Diesels ... I was assuming separate classes. Be nice to kick all the gasser's asses.
Re: Diesels ... I was assuming separate classes. Be nice to kick all the gasser's asses.
Well thank u guys for all your input . Yes the gas and diesels will be different classes and I was planning on borrowing some suit case weights from my uncles tractor for weight and traction. This is not my first pull. I just want to show the ford and chevy die hard fans some mopar power. I have actually done better than some diesels in the past , but those guys were ametures trying to pull with stock tires and didn't have any experience. Theres a guy that ownes a real pullin sled near here and if you go out there on the right day when hes checking out his equipment he'll let you hook up and do some practice pulls.



