Funny thing is, most folks who have never read all these things on the 'net or in a motorcycle rag, and have never seen a dyno chart, probably don't have a clue that a dip or flat spot exists. I see all sorts of folks who used to be satisfied with their car or bike become unhappy overnight, just because they read a bunch of crap somewhere telling them that there is something wrong with how their vehicle runs. Untold gazzillions are spent to "fix" problems that most folks never knew they had. One marketing genius sells you the pipes to make your bike loud and look "cool", thus reinforcing your manhood. Of course, the pipes change the air flow through the engine, so another marketing genius sells you an add-on box to add more fuel and "fix" the lean condition caused by the pipes. Then the bike owner reads some more stuff and determines that the little black box isn't good enough, he needs a more expensive device and a dyno tune by some guy who probably couldn't spell dynomometer dynamometer last week but now he is an expert dyno operator and tuner. Yup, that's the ticket to solving the problem he didn't know he had in the first place. Only, the "tuner" couldn't tune his way out of a wet paper bag, so now there is a big flat spot and pinging and popping on decel and the gas mileage sucks. So off to the ads and the internet for the next idea, and we have the auto tuning devices for another $1k or so. Yeah, let's try that. And if we get lucky, the seller of such devices actually has a base map that matches our particular bike, and it actually works as advertised. Or, we find that the base map does not match up well with our bike and the "auto tune" isn't so "auto". Now we have to go back to the dyno guy to get the base map fixed, but of course he already proved he couldn't tune his way out of a wet paper bag, and there is no one else in the area.
Where does it end? Thousands spent so far on a "problem" the rider didn't even realize he had. I have a much better idea and proposal: Take all that money, put it in your PayPal account, then send it to me. My PayPal account is OU812.
Jerry
edit: good thing no one hired me to tune their bike, since I didn't spell dynamometer correctly either.