Mike M, as I said, come to a road course and you will not want to do autocross much anymore. I get my thrills from speed, which you can't achieve on an autocross course. With road course events, I am able to get on the track for 20 - 25 minutes at a time every hour or so. With autocross, you run, then you're done in 20 - 25 minutes for the rest of the day. Sorry, but you probably won't see me on an autocross course. I believe you explained to me that you pay your $15, you make your runs at your scheduled time, then you are there the remainder of the day 'working' the corners watching everyone else run. Just don't think I would like standing for a few hours instead of being on the course. I guess we could start an argument on what qualifies as a track and what qualifies as a course. I get it, you enjoy it, and your car is good doing autocross, great! I've done it, just didn't like it, not my cup of tea. We are a driving club, and the four members that showed up in their cars yesterday for Snake & Eggs wanted to drive, that's what we did, and we had a great day, as, I'm sure, did you.
Mike W - Mark explained it well - we are talking dyno numbers, not 1/4 mile times, not if he can hook up on the street, we are ONLY talking dyno numbers. Just as every dyno is different, don't you think every G-Tech is different? Please, address only the dyno and whether or not the car, with this setup, can achieve 924rwhp.?
For the rest of you reading this, if you made it this far, I'm sorry

But let me say that I'm not angry/frustrated or anything, just having a spirited discussion with Mike on these numbers. Yep, it's way off topic, but mostly related. I get the accuracy of the g-tech and all, but if you don't do an actual run down the track with a time or get on a dyno, it's all just numbers, ain't it?