I think you accidentally wrote V10 instead of F10![]()
13hp over stock..i guess they are playing the Nissan GT-R game![]()
Without any other information about this car, how would you know it's "exactly at 560 hp" vs 574? These kinds of dynos almost always seem to record low numbers compared to Dynojet dynos (which, as far as I know, won't give you an estimated drivetrain loss figure as the Maha dyno does).721 NM would be 41 NM more than claimed. That's quite a lot. But it would explain the good acceleration times on par with the on paper much torquier E63 PP. Although 444hp at the wheels is not 574 hp in my mind. Even if you use a quite high drive train loss ratio of 18% it's still nowhere close to 574 hp.
With 18% it would be 524 hp. With 20% it would be 533hp. Given the fact that those cars are naturally dyno unfriendly (electronics, trans, etc. ) like the old E63, I say they're exactly at 560 hp, plus minus a little. I remember running an E63 with the old 6.2L at the shop and man it didn't put out good numbers at all (424 rwhp), yet still ran 12.54 so all the horses were there![]()
Just see this, as confirmation, that the car is probably giving what BMW is promising as these dynos are quite far from an exact science. Everything plays into the result you see. Had they done 5 runs and posted the results, we would have gotten 5 different numbers. Only thing that matters in reality is when the M5 is placed next to it's competitors and the loud pedal gets floored. So far the car has seem very capable in these situations.
Peak dyno numbers are just for bragging rights.
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