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Net ratings are not at the rear wheels, they are also at the flywheel. The difference is that gross HP (the higher ratings) are for a bare engine - no accessories of any kind. No alternator, no air cleaner, water pump, air pump, and a straight pipe exhaust. The net HP is with the engine configured as it was installed in the car - stock exhaust, airbox,, all accessories installed and working.

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The higher Hp numbers were taken from an engine on a test stand , no water pump, or alternator , no fan, no smog pump , no air cleaner, . Just the engine and the test was run and that is how the numbers derived at . This is how all cars were advertised . Then things changed and the numbers were taken from he rear wheels. Adding a cam will change the RPM where the engine will make its HP , but you will also need to increase compression , milling the head, add headers and new exhaust out to a 2 1/4 or 2 1/2'' . This will help the engine breathe. Alone the cam wont help that much . These engines were tuned at the factory . To improve the HP requires changes. This is all a balancing act , one thing is dependant on the other . Lower the gearing ratio in the diff will give you performance for a lot less cash. Just changing from your 3.36 to 1 gearing to 3.54s from a automatic car will make a difference and you will still have a car you can drive on the Freeway at speed. Gary

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Hi Guys:

I believe that there is great misunderstanding of the series of

events that resulted in the current SAE Net HP rating system.

It is not a matter of Gross HP vs SAE Net HP. Didn't happen like that....

These are three different rating systems.

Gross HP

SAE HP

SAE Net HP

Nissan used SAE HP ratings for our 240-Z's. It's not Gross and it's not Net.

The L24's were rated at 150/151 SAE HP, and when measured at the rear wheels

the average 240-Z will put down between 112 and 118 HP.

Where you see large differences in reported HP - you are usually looking at the difference between California cars and the rest of the US. California had stricter emissions standards than the rest of the US for several years during the 70's and early 80's. (remember that L28's in California got Cat.'s when the rest of the country did not have have them etc.)

FWIW,

Carl B.

Carl Beck

Clearwater, FL USA

http://ZHome.com

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