
Maybe it was cuz I did all the mods at once. Sorry for the wrong info guys
No need to apologize - here's what tends to happen with mods:
Somebody buys a mod. The install the mod. The mod causes the truck to lose power down-low but up through mid-range the power rushes back to where it was stock and the driver SWEARS he/she can now FEEL the power increase.
Or - somebody gets a baseline dyno for their truck. They use the dyno Schmedlapp Tuning...air temps in the 90s. Next year they add a bottle of snake oil to their engine and re-dyno and the plots now show an increase in power! holy crap it WORKED! Except it didn't - what they did was dyno on a different dyno, with air intake temps in the teens.
OR - Somebody baseline dyno's their truck. Then then pour in the snake oil and re-dyno on the same machine within the hour and holy-lord LOOK a gain of 5hp at 2800rpms. But...below 2800 and above 2900 they LOST 12hp. But...see? PROOF they 'gained power'.
OR, OR - They spend $1500 for a mod that gives their truck a 5hp gain at 5000-6000 rpms. Yup. Real honest gain. WHILE at 5000rpms. So they paid $1500 for 5hp across a 1000rpm band they almost NEVER see while driving.
Once I had a car gain 25hp across a broad range of RPM and still had the same peak power rating. All the gains were below peak - and the mod worked awesome (removed a cat from a turbo charged car). Gained REAL solid power because the turbo would spool faster; get faster into boost. Yet the plot showed that at the limit the cat was NOT restrictive whatsoever.
See how goofy 'making power' - specifically - MEASURING power can be?