RecklessWOT
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2015
- Posts
- 2,556
- Reaction score
- 4,764
- Location
- New Hampshire
- First Name
- Kevin
- Truck Year
- 1987
- Truck Model
- V10 Suburban Silverado
- Engine Size
- 350 TBI
A decent dyno shop takes the time to make sure they're doing everything right so they don't ruin your stuff. I have only ever had cars on a chassis dyno so I can't specifically tell you what happens on an engine dyno, but I do know the first time I ever had my car tuned I was actually turned away and had to come back because they inspected my car before doing anything and they found a soft radiator hose and a questionable wheel bearing, they didn't want to risk any sort of failure so they asked me to come back when I had taken care of it. I can't imagine the engine dyno guys would be much different. Sure they're not gonna take the engine apart and inspect how you built it, but they're not just gonna slap it on there and hammer the **** out of it and say "oh well not my problem" when they break it. I feel like if it breaks it would be because of something wrong with your setup, if you know you built a good engine then there's no reason it should break. Really all they're doing is running it through the RPMs a handful of times and making adjustments here and there, no worse than anything you will do on the street. Doing a big fat burnout probably puts more stress on it than using a dymamometer. Can't be nearly as bad as one day at a drag strip