Randall, go to the "TTS harley tuner" discussion started by grahn1967 to see your answer from Steve Cole 
I've read every post that Steve Cole wrote in the grahn1967 discussion and the only thing I could find about tuning your bike in open loop, or wide open throttle without a dyno, is this quote below written by him. If this is the only way to do it, by trial and error, I'd gladly pay a few hundred bucks for a WOT tune on a dyno rather than spending all day riding with a laptop and collecting data, then reviewing it and making more manual adjustments (guesstimates) to the front and rear VE tables to see if HP and torque increased from the previous VE data inputs I made. Even if you get a slight increase in torque and HP from your previous run, how do you know if you improved the front cylinder and hurt the rear cyclinder, yet the net increase was positive? It seems to me that the best approach is to have it dyno tuned for open loop then use Data Master, V-tune, and Mastertune programs for all adjustments less than 60% throttle.:
Re: TTS harley tuner
« Reply #54 on: August 11, 2008, 06:42:03 PM » Quote by Steve Cole
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Once the VE's are properly adjusted using the AFR table to adjust the mixture is all you need to do. You can use a narrow band sensors if you like but it is really unnecessary. If you have a dyno and are going to adjust for peak power you move the mixture at WOT using the PE AFR table until you get peak power. Once there richen the engine back up about .5 AFR, this is to keep the engine from overheating and build in some safety.
Without a dyno it is much the same. Open DataMaster and do a dyno recording. Ride the bike in 3rd or 4th gear which ever you have enough open road for. Lug the motor down to 2000 RPM and go WOT for as long as you can. If you can get to 6200 then back it down. Save the recorded data and view it in Datamaster. Find your acceleration run in the viewer and zoom in on it so you can see the start and stop of that area on the screen. Go under the "View" tab and open the "Dyno Graph" Select your bike and enter your weight in the Rider+ Payload area. Then select which gear you made you run in. Click "OK" when completed. Now on the main Graph click the courser to a position just after you started the run, click the "Set Start Rec" button. Now go to the end of the of the acceleration and move the courser to just before the end of the run, click the "Set End Rec" button. Now look at the lower right side of the Dyno screen and click the "Plot Data" button. This will give you a graph of the estimate torque and Hp of your combination. Now the numbers are close provided you have given the calculator all the proper information but to be honest it really does not matter for what we are trying to do here.
Now that you have a baseline you can change the tune and then rerun the test again but make sure you use the exact same setup in the calculator and the exact same gear as before. If you have made an improvement it will show an increase and if you went backwards it will show that as well. If you point on the dyno graph and click on it you will get a line and it will give the HP and Torque at that spot. You can move the line just by clicking on a different spot on the graph. So you have the tools with our product to do a complete tuneup fo your combination.