Turbo cars are typically ran uncorrected, the turbo corrects for the atmosphere difference
Not true, but ok if you think so. I still would like to see the actual run file(s).
everyone loves Stratified
here's a quote from Alex on the interwebs
Correction takes into account temperature and pressure and follows the J1349 standard. This is meant to normalize hp readings taken in different temperatures and at different pressures (altitudes) so that everyone is on the same playing field when comparing hp numbers. However this doesn't work well with turbo cars.
The baseline is 25* C temperature (77F) and 99KpA pressure (pretty much sea level pressure). This is a correction factor of 1.0 - or no correction.
If the temperature is colder, you will make more power and to normalize this the correction factor will start to be below 1.0 and vice versa if temperature is hotter.
If the air density is lower (higher altitude), you will make less power and to normalize the correction factor will be above 1.0. The same goes if air density is higher.
For turbocharged cars this model is however not accurate. At high altitudes the compressor is able to overcome the loss in air density and turbocharged cars are a lot more sensitive to temperature changes (in how timing for example is affected). This is why a lot of dyno shops don't apply correction factors when testing turbo cars and engines. The uncorrected power is exactly what the car makes on that day and in that location.