Old-Raptor-guy
FRF Addict
Holy shit, take a deep ******* breath. No one including me called you a liar. I asked what about just having a tune caused the ingestion of air.The sump of the oil pan is at the rear as it should be, but the pickup tube inlet is at the front of that sump area such that the (tuned especially) hard launch from stopped or even low first gear speed, it can uncover the pickup for some small amount of time to allow a gulp of air that WILL show up as a dip in data logs that include oil pressure. I was a huge skeptic initially until I started monitoring oil pressure in my data. It’s a FACT that it happens and the more often you like to “punch it” from low speed the greater the risk to the rod bearings. A forum member spun a bearing not long after some mods because he was having so much fun poking it with the new power There were no other issues noted in the data OTHER than the consistent oil pressure dip. I also have lots of data that plainly shows it until I started running a 1/2 qt over full. It doesn’t matter to me if anyone believes it, but they should.
You in fact prove with your data that the tune is not the cause per-se.
The tune allows a harder launch which causes more G force which causes the oil to slosh rearward at a more violent rate thus inducing air ingestion into the oil pump.
With how in run my Raptor in the desert I have wondered about oil slosh and may start running a little extra oil per your experience.
Your suggestion in that the tune causes the engine failure is in fact not 100% true. To implie the tune was the cause would implied that once tuned engine failure was unavoidable, which is only 1/2 the story. You can tune, not drive like a drunk, retarded 14 year old and not necessarily damage your engine........
We will talk more about lubricant temps tomorrow......
You are not wrong on that, but you are not correct either........