I'm very happy with it but I've been wondering what it would take (or if it's even possible) to get it up to 400 BHP? I don't want to de-cat, go FI or sacrifice the reliability of the engine.

Is the battery sprung or unsprung weight? I thought unsprung was only the wheels, brakes, tyres, some of the suspension linkage etc or have I got this wrong?BlingBling wrote:Apart from fitting long tube headers and a modified intak manifold there is not much else you can do other than going FI. I suppose nitrious is another option. The next step IMO is to reduce weight. LW wheels, battery, brake discs and front engine pulley will reduce the cars weight. The wheels and battery will do more wrt unsprung weight. The battery are seriously heavy, appporx 25kg, There are relaible and powerful race batteries available weighing half as much.
Unsprung weight has a ratio of 1:6.
1kg unsprung weight saved is equal to 6kgs sprung weight.
The stock alloys each weigh approx 13kg. TD Pro Race 1.2 weight 9kg
Therefore 3kgs saving per alloy = 3 x 4 x 6 = 72kgs effective saving off the car's sprung weight.
Or put it another way:
1720kgs for a B6 S4 divided by 370bhp (your car) = 4.64 kgs/bhp
That is every 4.64kg of sprung weight saved = 1bhp extra
So 72kgs saved / 4.64 = 15bhp extra equivalent due to the weight loss
The weight saving + longtube headers will push you nearer to the 400bhp mark.
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