RiverBeaver
Electrical
- Sep 24, 2005
- 6
Hi all, I'm new here and this is my first post... woohoo!
Anyway, my question is whether anyone is aware of proven benefits to supplementing the engine ground in certain vehicles. I'm a member of a Subaru owners forum and many there claim that on the turbocharged WRX, adding additional ground wires from the engine heads back to the battery makes their car run noticably smoother, esp. at wide-open throttle. I'm running 18psi of boost, and I know the mixture is harder to ignite under those conditions, and the reason why the plug gap is only 0.030". But the engine and it's grounding strap is part of the spark energy loop, and the shorter that is and the more parallel paths the better I would think. Can anyone confirm adding addition grounds would be beneficial and why?
Thanks,
Steve.
Anyway, my question is whether anyone is aware of proven benefits to supplementing the engine ground in certain vehicles. I'm a member of a Subaru owners forum and many there claim that on the turbocharged WRX, adding additional ground wires from the engine heads back to the battery makes their car run noticably smoother, esp. at wide-open throttle. I'm running 18psi of boost, and I know the mixture is harder to ignite under those conditions, and the reason why the plug gap is only 0.030". But the engine and it's grounding strap is part of the spark energy loop, and the shorter that is and the more parallel paths the better I would think. Can anyone confirm adding addition grounds would be beneficial and why?
Thanks,
Steve.