Behavior after DOD swap and cam upgrade

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JKaechler

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So, This past week we did the DOD cam swap on my Tahoe.
lots of hard work but it idles smooth and has a small lope as hoped for.

I used the Comp Cams single bolt cam that keeps the VVT
Camshaft Specs: Dur. @ .050" 214/228 | Lift .559"/.571" | LSA 114

Oil pressure from a new pump is slightly higher than before, and of course the new green o-ring on the pickup tube.
All seems to be well after the first road test.

here is the question:
When you are sitting still in drive, with foot on break it idles fine. when you take foot off brake, it gently accelerates up to about 1500rpm ish (not positive on the rpm here) and then it calmly shifts into second gear. None of this is done with any drama, and it leads me to believe that its either some kind of re-learn thing or maybe a transmission computer adjustment is needed. maybe its just that much of a power difference.

Has anyone experienced something like this?

My last step will be to do a datalog and send the info off to BlackBear for a final tune. Maybe that will address it.
 
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JKaechler

JKaechler

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Yep. My current suspicion is that the BlackBear 'startup tune' for a new cam has the in-drive idle set pretty high. I will be sending them the datalog later today anyways.
 

Dustin Jackson

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@JKaechler If you are in the middle of the tune with BlackBear I say work with them on this and then come back here if the problem isn't resolved through them. If you do fix the problem please update your post here in case anyone else has this problem we can tell them where to start looking.
 

RVTSP21K

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I'll probably get flamed for this since everyone here is diehard BlackBear but, don't count on a mailed tune. Sure, it's a great baseline but, find a local GM tuner and get it on a dyno to perfect the tuning. There is no replacement for a tuning expert watching live data and adjusting YOUR Tahoe's parameters accordingly.
 
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JKaechler

JKaechler

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I'll probably get flamed for this since everyone here is diehard BlackBear but, don't count on a mailed tune. Sure, it's a great baseline but, find a local GM tuner and get it on a dyno to perfect the tuning. There is no replacement for a tuning expert watching live data and adjusting YOUR Tahoe's parameters accordingly.
You are likely technically correct.... however. there are a whole load of practicalities that make BlackBear a better option.
- what local GM tuner? There appear not to be any in rural central texas
- sending files too and from BlackBear does not require me to take time off work (which i already had to do to rebuild the engine)
- BlackBear is a known cost. Easier to plan for than a shop who may or may not tack on extra charges because they need to make the payment on their boat.
- It gets the job done. I am not looking for some kind of razor edge performance perfection. Just a bit better than stock is ok with me.

Thats just the top-of-mind response.
 

Charlie207

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I'll probably get flamed for this since everyone here is diehard BlackBear but, don't count on a mailed tune. Sure, it's a great baseline but, find a local GM tuner and get it on a dyno to perfect the tuning. There is no replacement for a tuning expert watching live data and adjusting YOUR Tahoe's parameters accordingly.

I've yet to find anyone near me that will even respond to my emails. Imagine having a hand full of $$$ and people just ghost you.
 
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