Jason,
Great Info!
I do have a question as I have been looking into the Dyno test subject a lot due to the WIDE variation in numbers we see out west.
If you look at the five sequential runs on the 88 DME you see that the numbers have plateaued, indicating that you have reached full power. When you look at the earlier DME, you have done only 3 runs and the power is still climbing (sequence 1 going to 3), indicating a possibility that the car has possibly not reached full operating temperature and therefore not full power.
When you repeat the test, continue the pulls until power stops increasing and/or declines. We have seen in excess of a 10 HP variation in the same car at the same event. I even had my old, tired motor Dynoed at one event and there were a lot of pulls done. The power varied from 126 to 139. An expert who looked at the chart asked how long the car had been sitting before the first pull. It had been 30+ minutes. He said that the longer it has been from coming off the track, the lower the initial HP reading will be. They need to reach saturation of heat before the highest reading will be achieved. By following many Dyno runs since, this has proved true. Even a 10 minute wait can take 3 or 4 runs to reach maximum.
If you ran the 87 first and then did an immediate swap (car still on Dyno with no chassis mount changes) then ran with the 88, you were likely then reaching saturation.
Great idea and the data is useful. Just next time, continue the pulls until you reach saturation.
Chuck