DNA Tuning (Australia)

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Thread: ECU upgrades, poweroutputs and prices

  1. #11
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    Feb 2011
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    Have any of you guys ever realised or questioned that fact that the majority (or all) of the chip manufacturers are quoting tune figures for the Golf R with 265HP as the starting point. Now a simple HP to KW convertor will show you that 265HP = 199kw.........so this is the european spec version of the engine.

    As im sure most of you are aware, Australia gets a de-tuned version of this engine (for our hotter climate etc) and this leaves us with 188kw (252HP) and 330nm as the starting point.

    So.....two questions i am asking you and i have also emailed APR / Bluefin etc etc for their answers.

    1) Can Australian buyers expect the same peak HP/KW and NM figures as stated on all of the tuning company's dyno graphs? I believe the de-tuned version of the engines we get here in Australia is a computer based de-tune anyway (engine and turbo etc is identical)

    2) If this is the case, then when we are getting our cars tuned, we are actually getting larger gains in both HP/KW and NM than what the tuners dyno graphs are showing.

    APR (they quote a 265HP / 199kw starting point - European spec engine)
    APR - High Performance Development for Audi, VW and Porsche Vehicles.

    Bluefin (they also quote a 199kw starting point - European spec engine)
    http://www.mybluefin.com.au/search?m...5&variant=2226

    REVO (no specific listing for the Golf R but i looked up Audi S3 and it says 40HP / 60NM increase from a 260HP starting point)
    Performance ECU Tuning Software by Revo Technik

    GIAC (rubbish website and no specific data for the Golf R so i used the Audi S3). Says an increase of 25-45HP
    GIAC - Software Programs


    Ill be getting my R tuned in about 4-6 weeks once i have put a few more kms on the clock and am very heavily considering going with the Bluefin as its several hundred $ cheaper than Revo or Giac, half the price of APR - quotes very similar power and torque figures to all the others - and offers ME the option to revert back to stock if ever needed while my car is under warranty.

    Being based in Newcastle, i don't like the thought of having to drive the car down to Sydney if there is an issue with my tune or if VW wipe it from the ECU while doing a service. The convenience of having that control is getting a thumbs up for Bluefin.
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  2. #12
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    Sep 2010
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    Pappon was asking about Mk V GTI as per his other thread. $730 for this tune; pictured dyno graph is from a Skoda Octavia, which runs the same 2.0TFSI K03 Bosch MED9 engine as the Mk V GTI. No other mods at all, just our 188kW/405Nm tune. How the dyno numbers correlate to the specification is always open to interpretation, but what I can say for sure is how smooth our tune is; even smoother than the stock power curve.

    The same tune is available for MED17 2.0TSI engines ie. Mk 6 GTI for $830.


  3. #13
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    I would love to be able to consider your custom tune, but unfortunately the fact that you are Melbourne based just isn't practical for me. Even the couple of custom places based in Sydney are too far away to be practical.

    Quote Originally Posted by DNA Tuning View Post
    Pappon was asking about Mk V GTI as per his other thread. $730 for this tune; pictured dyno graph is from a Skoda Octavia, which runs the same 2.0TFSI K03 Bosch MED9 engine as the Mk V GTI. No other mods at all, just our 188kW/405Nm tune. How the dyno numbers correlate to the specification is always open to interpretation, but what I can say for sure is how smooth our tune is; even smoother than the stock power curve.

    The same tune is available for MED17 2.0TSI engines ie. Mk 6 GTI for $830.


  4. #14
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    Oct 2010
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    Melbourne, VIC
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lucas_R View Post
    I would love to be able to consider your custom tune, but unfortunately the fact that you are Melbourne based just isn't practical for me. Even the couple of custom places based in Sydney are too far away to be practical.
    John can bundle the DNA Tuning maps with the SRS-II switcher which operates like the Bluefin so you can revert to stock and back.
    Viezu use the same switcher but labelled as the V-Switch for the same functionality at very good prices too - see here.

    Both John and Simon (Viezu) are nice guys too so it's worth contacting both of them to see what can be done for your 'R'

  5. #15
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    The dyno graph presented in the above is from my Skoda Octavia RS's dyno run so I can vouch for DNA's tune. Very happy with it and very comfortable to live with on a daily basis. Even the partner doesn't know its tuned (well at least until you step on the throttle a bit further, then all hell breaks loose).

  6. #16
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    May 2009
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    Quote Originally Posted by Gti Dave View Post
    The dyno graph presented in the above is from my Skoda Octavia RS's dyno run so I can vouch for DNA's tune. Very happy with it and very comfortable to live with on a daily basis. Even the partner doesn't know its tuned (well at least until you step on the throttle a bit further, then all hell breaks loose).
    Just out of curiosity, how old is your Octavia?

  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by manol View Post
    Just out of curiosity, how old is your Octavia?
    2009 model just purchased a tad over 2 months ago. Got it chipped pretty much shortly after I bought it. Its the prefacelift model witht eh golf mkV gti engine and drivetrain. Power output is bloody smooth and linear and highly predictable. Unlike the APR V2 tune in the Polo Gti.

  8. #18
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    Feb 2011
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    My gripe with tuning companies and for that matter car companies, when they talk power outputs is that they are talking engine power-not at the wheel power. Let's forget about car companies for a minute, a tuner who spends a considerable amount of time developing a tune for a car would presumably have worked on a number of cars and would then have an average across the range power number people could expect to get.

    I have had Bluefin and now on Revo and their claimed figures really add up to nothing as what they have been able to tune the engine to is not what my car will put out on the road when I am driving. For me a tuning company that said "hey at the wheel you could expect to see at the wheel power increase from betweem X kw and Y kw" or "total at the wheel power for your car is most likely to average X kw" would be far more helpful.

    All the talk about power outputs for engines only is great for the tuners but for us humble folk surely some estimated at the wheel figures would be more useful in making a decision on which tune to buy.

  9. #19
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    Sep 2010
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    Melbourne, Victoria
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    This is a very valid statement, but the reality is that it would be much more complicated to give the specification based on wheel horsepower/kilowatts. Put 2 cars on different dynos, different locations, different days, and you could say have anywhere between 110kw to 140kw on a stock Golf GTI let's say for instance.

    Now, if one tuner uses a particular dyno that reads on the low side to specify their power, then they are disadvantaged. For instance, if on their dynos they achieve 110kw stock, and 135kw tuned, that is 23% gain, but another tuner that uses another dyno for development say goes from 130kw stock to 140kw tuned, which is only 8%, but their specification of 140kw at the wheels would sound more impressive.

    I hope that makes sense; in reality the best way to rate power is not by absolute numbers - it should be based on percentages. Of course, with abit of maths, rating it based on engine power is essentially specifying the percentage gains, because tuners will for instance obtain 110kw at the wheels, and deduce that is the equivalent of 147kw at engine (as per VW spec). As such, 135kw at the wheels after tune would mean that at the engine there is 180kw.

    Quote Originally Posted by Ando01 View Post
    My gripe with tuning companies and for that matter car companies, when they talk power outputs is that they are talking engine power-not at the wheel power. Let's forget about car companies for a minute, a tuner who spends a considerable amount of time developing a tune for a car would presumably have worked on a number of cars and would then have an average across the range power number people could expect to get.

    I have had Bluefin and now on Revo and their claimed figures really add up to nothing as what they have been able to tune the engine to is not what my car will put out on the road when I am driving. For me a tuning company that said "hey at the wheel you could expect to see at the wheel power increase from betweem X kw and Y kw" or "total at the wheel power for your car is most likely to average X kw" would be far more helpful.

    All the talk about power outputs for engines only is great for the tuners but for us humble folk surely some estimated at the wheel figures would be more useful in making a decision on which tune to buy.

  10. #20
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    Aug 2010
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    Camberwell, Vic
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    Quote Originally Posted by DNA Tuning View Post
    This is a very valid statement, but the reality is that it would be much more complicated to give the specification based on wheel horsepower/kilowatts. Put 2 cars on different dynos, different locations, different days, and you could say have anywhere between 110kw to 140kw on a stock Golf GTI let's say for instance.

    Now, if one tuner uses a particular dyno that reads on the low side to specify their power, then they are disadvantaged. For instance, if on their dynos they achieve 110kw stock, and 135kw tuned, that is 23% gain, but another tuner that uses another dyno for development say goes from 130kw stock to 140kw tuned, which is only 8%, but their specification of 140kw at the wheels would sound more impressive.

    I hope that makes sense; in reality the best way to rate power is not by absolute numbers - it should be based on percentages. Of course, with abit of maths, rating it based on engine power is essentially specifying the percentage gains, because tuners will for instance obtain 110kw at the wheels, and deduce that is the equivalent of 147kw at engine (as per VW spec). As such, 135kw at the wheels after tune would mean that at the engine there is 180kw.
    All very true and quite right, but it just goes to demonstrate that the issues with dyno is as much the operator as it is the day of the week, the weather, the car etc. Basically, to my mind the only value of seeing what the ECU upgrade offers is what the manufacturer is telling you, since they have a pretty decent dyno that uses the same settings each time, coupled with the real ideal scenario of having your car on a dyno before it's been tuned, then the Bluefin or anything else is uploaded, then it is put back on the dyno and the two graphs plotted against each other. Only then can you truly see what the power gains bring.

    With all due respect, seeing a graph on one car shows a power output relevant to that dyno, and that car on that day with that operator. I bet you take it back on another day and the figures will vary - perhaps not by much, but the upgrade is only as good as the car was in the first place.

    Thus, any operator (and in this case DNA Tuning since they uploaded the graph above), while the graph can look good, if you could show the car without the tune and then with the tune, all of a sudden we have a proper case of same dyno, car, operator and weather (if done on the same day) that truly shows the percentage power and torque increase.

    I just wish everyone could show this as then, and only then, do you see a true image of the benefit of any upgrade system.
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