RedMist wrote:However after your last post I had considered that there may be a negative P in action on the NA (after all 300hp, crank from a 3.5ltr may not be 100% VE). This combined with an oxygenated fuel of higher octane (slower burn), may be the discrepancy I'm seeing.... but it still looks odd. What appears to be well under double the O2 creating well over double the HP.
It is a shame that you didn't do a same fuel equivalent tune. What ECU do you run? Did you have it tuned NA versus boosted?
If you have an NA versus boosted E30 tune and a curious (/ geeky ) enough, then I recommend having a look at the fuel maps as if it is tuned well then it should be able to start painting a bit more of a picture.
Assuming you have a Link - the G4 software bases more or less bases it's fuel calculations using the fuel table values as P compensated % pulse widths. If you get curious - take look at your NA and FI fuel tables (~100kpa MAP for the NA and ~180kpa for turbo) and then scale the numbers for the FI fuel table to accommodate for target AFR.
For sake of ranting, I've just put some rough numbers that should be accurate enough still to give an idea if you decided to give it a crack and put your own numbers in place:
NA: 13.0:1 AFR target on BP98 (~.88λ with stoich = 14.7)
FI: 10.6:1 AFR target on E30 (~.82λ with stoich = 13.0)
To scale the pulse width % - scaledFuel = Fuel / (13.0/10.6)
Do it for the rpm you reckon you may be around 100%VE on the NA setup, divide "scaledFuel" by that number and you have an suitably rugged estimation of the relative VE of what your engine is running under boost.
Again, just a thought of something to play with if you are at all curious to get even a rough impression of what flow dynamics are happening when you start throwing boost through the motor.
Anyway, I've got too carried away... I've broken my own promise to myself not to get involved on forum threads like this but this thread got interesting, I'll bow out from here but I at least reckon it is worth getting curious and scientific about investigating this stuff directly instead of just believing what the odd magazine article and forum/internet post says - a lot of it is overly generalized and sometimes misguided (but seemingly plausible) conclusions from too few variables considered... the rabbit hole goes deep