Yeah…2700rpm at 392ftlbs is 201.5HP
TQxRPM/5252
Exactly
The reasonable explanation is dyno software programmed to correct gross output for Standard Day conditions. The common correction factors are temperature, barometric pressure, and humidity. Given a hot day, low pressure, and lots of humidity, the corrected HP will be higher than indicated by the measured torque.
We live in the info age. I pulled up the reported conditions for Visalia at the date and time noted on the dyno sheet, then hand-calculated using what I believe are SAE J607 correction factors, which can be described as old-school. The baseline values are familiar to aero guys; 29.92, 60F, and dry air. The reported conditions were 29.68, 72F, and 38%, so the HP calculated from torque and RPM is multiplied by 1.0081, 1.0115, and 1.0264 respectively...
(2700*392)/5252 = 201.5
201.5*1.0081*1.0115*1.0264 = 210.9 corrected HP
...which doesn't match the reported 223. So why? Different standard of course, of which there are at least
eight. An operator can pick any of them, plus there are a bunch of subtle accounting, operating, and calibration details.
I'd rather not speculate. Even if the HP numbers are, well...presented favorably, Lycon is a respected shop. Here the takeaway is
get raw RPM, torque, and atmosphere. Do your own HP calculation using the correction factors from a standard of your choice. It doesn't eliminate torque and RPM calibration errors (every dyno is a little different), but at least your numbers will be comparable for all the engines examined.
Note a wildcard. Lycon uses a propeller test stand. The correction factors are based on ambient pressure, but pressure behind the prop is higher. That's prohibited by most standards.
I apologize for only posting the RPM, torque, and HP columns, as you couldn't see the manifold pressure and fuel flows during those bumps in the graphs. Someone was rowing the levers, so please, ignore that part. My intent was to illustrate the HP calculation.
Fuel flow, well if you truly believe 230HP you would want up around 22GPH or a tad more. I have done some rough calculations and I suspect you are likely to be 215 BHP maximum, I would be interested in Dan's speculative calculation based on his experience. On 215HP you need to be at 21GPH, and no less than 20.5 based on sea level and standard day atmospherics.
Shucks David, we've talked about that before. You like things rich as six feet up a cow's butt. I like mixture closer to best power, and use
the cooling system to cool.