I think it's just a matter of using different tools to get as close as you can with no particular system being perfect. A braked dyno does give you more options to check static outputs, which I'm sure you'll learn more about as Charlie gets to learn his new Factory Pro.tony wrote:Well Sticky, ....If you run an inertia dyno as its supposed to be used from a standing start it has load.. of course... but how to you hold it in midrange and replicate load it has in the real world without a load device?
All I am saying is that this is the way to go for tuning in the scooter world.. you know this is true already.
I've seen how little load is on a motor on an inertia dyno once the drum is spinning and how little effect it has when mapping ignitions.
I was only trying to be constructive and give out some of my findings and things I've learnt over the years.
However a braked dyno in the hands of an idiot is a dangerous tool. I've heard some very bad things about the use of brake dynos grenading two-strokes, but that's possibly down to a lack of cooling in the facility and maybe a lack of understanding on the part of the operators.
I'd rather trust a clever operator like Charlie with an inertia dyno than a plonker with a braked dyno. As ever, getting results from a dyno is the easy bit. Interpreting them is the hard bit, and that's what you pay the money for.