Dyno Numbers Explained — Why Results Vary (and How to Compare Properly)
If you’ve ever searched “dyno numbers explained” or wondered why dyno results vary, you’re not alone. Dynos are a measurement tool — not an internet scoreboard. The real value is using the dyno to compare changes on the same vehicle, on the same dyno, in similar conditions.
At SC Diesel Tuning, we use our dyno to establish a true baseline, validate improvements, and show the full power and torque curve (what you actually feel on the road). If you’re chasing repeatable data or planning mods, start with a baseline on our ECU Dyno Tuning process and book via Contact / Appointments.
What a dyno measures (and what it doesn’t)
A chassis dyno typically measures power and torque at the wheels (or hubs), which means the result is influenced by more than just the engine. That’s why two dyno sheets from different shops can show different numbers even if the vehicle is unchanged.
- Good use: baseline vs after mods/tune on the same dyno.
- Bad use: comparing your sheet to someone else’s from a different dyno, different day, different setup.
Why dyno results vary
1) Dyno type and configuration
Different dynos apply load differently and can be configured in different ways (ramp rates, smoothing, load control). Even a small change in setup can move the final number.
2) Correction factors (SAE vs STD vs others)
Most dynos apply “correction” to normalise results for air density (temperature, pressure, humidity). Depending on the standard used, corrected numbers can read higher or lower.
- SAE vs STD can produce noticeably different figures.
- “Uncorrected” runs reflect the day’s conditions (hot day = usually lower power).
External reading (if you want to go deep): SAE vs STD correction factors explained, how dyno correction works (temp/pressure/humidity), HP Academy discussion on dyno correction.
3) Tyres, tyre pressure, and strapping (roller dynos)
On roller dynos, tyres become part of the measurement system. Tyre pressure, tyre temperature, wheel slip, and strap tension can all change the reading.
- Higher torque diesels can highlight slip/strap effects more than you’d expect.
- Same tyre pressure + same strap method = more repeatable data.
4) Ambient temps and heat soak
Hot conditions and back-to-back runs can cause heat soak. As intake temps rise, power often drops and the ECU may reduce output to protect the engine. That’s why “cool morning” and “hot afternoon” results can look like different vehicles.
5) Gear selection and transmission behaviour
Gear choice changes load and acceleration rate. Autos/DSGs also behave differently as temps rise (converter slip, shifting strategy, torque limits). For apples-to-apples comparisons, the gear and procedure must stay consistent.
6) Vehicle condition
A dyno is brutally honest. Boost leaks, dirty sensors, blocked filters, DPF restriction, or cooling issues can all show up as inconsistent results.
How to compare dyno runs properly (the rules)
- Same dyno, same operator (ideal).
- Same tyres and pressures (roller dyno) + same strap method.
- Same gear and same test procedure.
- Similar engine / intake temps (don’t compare a heat-soaked run to a cool first pull).
- Compare the whole curve, not just the peak number.
Peak numbers vs the curve (what actually matters)
Peak power makes a good screenshot. The power and torque curve is what you feel: mid-range pull, response, and how well it holds power under load (especially for towing).
Related reading: Towing with a tuned diesel — what changes & what to watch.
Want a real baseline you can trust?
If you want consistent data (before mods, after mods, or just to know where you’re starting), book in for a baseline and verification runs. We aim for repeatable results and a proper comparison — not a one-and-done hero pull.
Book a Dyno Session / Get a Quote
FAQ
Why is my dyno number lower than my mate’s?
Because you’re almost certainly not comparing the same dyno, settings, temps, tyres, or procedure. Use the dyno to compare changes on the same setup.
Is a hub dyno “more accurate” than a roller dyno?
Hub setups can be more repeatable because they remove tyre variables, but the key is still consistent setup and procedure.
Should I compare peak power or the curve?
The curve. Especially on diesels, the mid-range and torque delivery matter more than a headline peak number.
