Do all dynos require weight input?

i think on a mustang dyno they try to give you what they think you'd run in the quarter, which means all they'd need is hp and weight and they can give you a pretty rough estimate? i honestly don't know, just taking a wild guess
 
If it takes 1 mole of heat to raise one gram of water 1 degree then 10 moles of heat should raise 10 grams of water one degree, right? Well, if you had 7 grams of water and you had 50 moles of heat how fast could you raise those 7 grams of water? ........It's kind'a like that, it's an algorithm that the Mustang Dyno uses to "guess" at numbers. And yes, I left out *time* in hopes that the wheels started to spin. Is that a conumdrum?

Go get a G-Tech and play with that. LOL

And really, you need to go read up on a Mustang Dyno.
Here--> http://www.mustangdyne.com/index.htm

BTW, I did not call you stupid because you didn't know the answer, that's ignorance. I said stupid because you keep asking the same question like some kid. Get up off your tail and go LOOK for yourself. We can spoon feed you all-day-long but all that's going to do is make ya lazy and a bit of a fool. Don't feel bad we have all done it...myself as well.:Cheer:
 
So is it possible to setup an inertia dyno to better load down an engine?

Or is every dyno with a drum the same weight going to load down an engine the exact same way?
 
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