Bextreme04
Full Access Member
- Joined
- May 13, 2019
- Posts
- 4,464
- Reaction score
- 5,630
- Location
- Oregon
- First Name
- Eric
- Truck Year
- 1980
- Truck Model
- K25
- Engine Size
- 350-4bbl
No. Testing conclusion is that you will make more absolute power with a carb properly tuned for the exact circumstances being tested. Efficiency is not even close. The EFI will beat out the carb hands down for efficiency in every situation.If you want MPG and reliability with EFI, I still think the factory stuff is going to be better than any aftermarket, so long as you have a decent tune done (which is needed either way).
There has been testing done before, I think the final conclusion is that a carb, when properly tuned for a specific point, gets better power and efficiency. But the really big caveat to that is that the tuning would need to change every time the air pressure changes from elevation, or the temperature changes, or the engine is warming up, or the fuel quality changes from tank to tank, or any other parameter changes by a small amount. At that point, you would need something like a computer that could handle all of those variations, probably some type of sensor in the exhaust to make sure the changes are right, and a way for the computer to adjust how much fuel is being added/injected, and I think you see where I'm going...
Good EFI on an older engine is better than a carb on a newer engine for 99% of the stuff out there, but there's a bit more to be had with a newer engine that has inherently better efficiency (like modern heads and bearings).
All that said, I'm liking the 8.1...
You don't go for EFI with the intention of more power. You go with EFI so that you know it will get it's best efficiency and power in EVERY situation without you needing to mess with it. Cold out? Cranks right up and runs good. Hot out? Cranks right up and runs good. Top of a mountain? Cranks right up and runs good.
It also has the added bonus of being able to monitor and protect the engine under heavy duty conditions. A carb will let you wash the cylinder walls from being way too rich or burn a hole in a valve or piston from pulling a heavy load up a steep grade with your foot to the floor. A properly set up EFI system will keep it from detonating, melting pistons, burning up the trans, etc... without you needing to stare at the gauges all the time.
Run an L29(7.4L) or L18(8.1L) and keep the factory P01 or P59 ECU. Get it tuned by someone competent and you'll have all the power you need and still get 12-14mpg when you can manage to keep your foot out of the skinny pedal.