Phattey:
If the dealer doesn't have an inertial dyno with the Dynojet Tuning Software then he's not tuning the bike under load as if you were riding it. The air fuel numbers calibrated under this scenario can be all over the map. Let me explain how the dynojet tuning process looks when you're watching a tech do it.
There are approximately 12 rpm levels at 500 rpm increments and 10-15 throttle position settings to tune. This leaves 120-180 tuning cells in the matrix. Each one of them needs to have a separate air fuel ratio determined but not all of them are tuned. For instance, you can't run 5500 rpm at 0% throttle.
At each throttle position and rpm level, the dyno puts the bike under load, when the load reaches optimum the tech must watch a graphical air fuel gauge with a preset ratio and incrementally adjust the actual ratio from the exhaust gas sensor to that level. He does this by means of the computer keypad.
If the tech's air fuel goal is 14/1 then your bike will be somewhere in that range when you ride, but the level will still fluctuate because of all the factors which are different outside vs. in the dyno room.
The whole process will take 2-3 hours even with an experienced tech, if done right.
After this, the tech must address the timing curve, which is a separate matirx, but still based on rpm and throttle position. The timing curve is more generic and takes less time to set up.
Without the proper dyno and software, this process might take a full day to correctly conclude. This is one reason why the race tuner comes with maps already laid out.
To help you, IMHO, if you have a certified dynojet facility tune your bike, I think your numbers will go way up and your air/fuel willbe in a much better range.
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