Good answers v1p3r, i'll add a few "- " below yours. 1] Plug wires? On a stock car, useless.
-Agreed. At least not enough benefit for you to actually notice.
2] Iridium Spark Plugs, 4 electrode plugs? Same as above.
-Agreed. Again, they do have some benefits, but not enough for you to feel, or maybe even see on a dyno.
3] Air filter/CAI? colder denser air gives more power, how dense it can be ?? Useful, but CAI could get wet and damage engine in the rain. How dense air can get depends on location, altitude, season etc.
-Agreed again. But also, true CAIs suck outside air, while short rams and most stock intakes take air from under the hood. Even if it's 80 degrees outside, that is still significantly cooler than the air under your hood, hence, significantly cooler, denser, etc. A good CAI is usually a great bang for the buck. As far as damage/hydro locking your engine from sucking up moisture; many companies are integrating a bypass valve into their CAIs nowadays (AEM was the first to do it), so when/if your intake sucks in moisture (from a puddle, etc.), the intake stops sucking air from the main filter, and sucks it further upstream from a smaller, filtered bypass valve. Usually these intakes are a bit more pricey, but worth it IMO.
4] Lightened flywheel? Practically useless, since you will die in traffic.
-LOL! Agreed. It is a pain in traffic and daily driving, but if you are building a car for drag, it's well worth it.
5] electric supercharger? supercharger is to make air dense, good for hilly region operation. airplane piston engines have supercharger for this reason Hahahahaha...this is the most useless.
-I agree. But in all fairness, I saw a magazine write-up on a product called an "e-Ram" - one of these electric superchargers, that showed a 9 whp gain on a U.S. Spec EX Civic. I couldn't believe it (it was from a reputable U.S. magazine, no less). I don't see how it's possible, but I thought I should mention it. Most of these "electric superchargers" I see ads for are made of plastic and are total garbage. Not only do they not add any power, but if a plastic piece comes off or the fan blows apart in your intake tube, say bye-bye engine. If anyone wants to do research on these, I would look at the e-Ram.
6] synthetic oil? good lubricated engine with good cooling property can help in better life of engine than powerTrue, useful. But also expensive to an extreme for some brands. Whether it justifies the expense is debatable
-Certainly useful, but you probably don't need it on a car that is less than 5 years old. Once you start racking up the mileage, or your car starts to age pretty good, it's probably not a bad idea to switch to synthetic or semi-synthetic. Won't add any power (at least to a car that is functioning properly), but it could extent the life of your motor.
7] 97 octane fuel with octane boosters? beter octane rating better power.Useless on a stock car. A lot of Indian cars perform better on regular unleaded.
-Very, very true. Higher octane fuel only helps if you are tuned for it. If your car only needs 87 octane, adding 92 is a waste of money, unless you get a tune/remap/piggyback that lets you take advantage of it. Also like to mention, octane booster is NOTHING more than higher octane gasoline (sometimes mixed with a bit of injector cleaner and other detergents). It mixes in an EXACTLY LINEAR fashion with the fuel in your tank already. For example, if you have 9 gallons of 90 octane, and you add 1 gallon of "100 octane booster," you will now have the equivalent of 10 gallons of 91 octane fuel. Seriously, you can check the math if you want

- you are better off to just fill up with better gas at the pump.
8] TB spacers? not for mpfi i suppose... for the carb muscle cars. Useless.
-Generally agree.
9] Strut braces? handling Useful. But then you have to push the car or drive that fast to know the difference.
-Agreed 100%.
10] ECU reflash or remapping? this should definitely exploit the full potential of engine, but loss of fuel economy. Depends on what you remap for. And I don't think you can get it done anywhere in India.
-Agreed. If you need/want to do something to account for i/h/e, you are better off with a cheaper piggyback, but if you are going to be doing a LOT of modding (more than just i/e, etc.), do the remap LAST. Any reputable company is going to need to account for your full mods list to give you the best remap. Do the remap last, unless you want to do it twice.
11] Low profile tyres? great handling improvement at educed ride quality and more surface drag beyond a particular size? Also heavier, since the rim will be larger.
-Sort of agree. You don't HAVE to get different rims, to get a lower profile tire, especially if you only drop 1 series, or maybe even 2. Also, if you are going to drop to a very low profile tire, chances are, you are going to get aftermarket rims - in which case, you could also get a light-weight rim, that may actually weigh less than your smaller factory rims.
12] free flow exhausts? this does help but cost a sound No it doesn't. An exhaust system is like a chain. Only as strong as its weakest link. The most restrictive part is normally the cat-con or the mid-muffler. You need a complete free-flow system with a well-designed set of headers to extract some power.
-Agreed about exhaust working as a system. To get the most gains, you need to do the whole thing, and it has to be the right size. Biggest isn't always best. You also have to look at overall gain. An exhaust that gives you an 8 hp higher PEAK gain on a dyno, might actually have less overall power (total area under the curve from idle to redline). Remember, you spend very little time at PEAK power - increasing total area under the power curve, is what makes you faster. If you gain 20 whp for 500 RPM range, and lose 5 whp under the rest of the RPM range, you are going to be slower, not faster.
13] high lift cams? giving more feed to engine, hope it can eat it all without vomiting. Costs a load. You will need to fiddle with idle settings for days to get it right. Bye-bye, fuel efficiency. Low-end response will also die, if you get a wild cam.
-Agreed in general.
14)porting polishing? whats this. Enlarging and smoothing the ports on the intake and exhaust of the head, to ensure better flow-rates. Helps.
-Definitely helps. Definitely expensive (at least in the USA).
15) reduce weight? this will definitely increase power due increased power to weight ratio. And your car will bounce about because there is less weight to root it to the ground.
-You have to drop significant weight to affect how your car feels during normal driving - 50-100 pounds is a pretty easy "mod" we can all do easily (take out factory spare and jack, don't race with a passenger, etc.).
16) do not ice performance cars.you put in lot of weight with those sub and its box, amps. dampimg And again, your car will bounce about.
-Don't know about the bouncing, but it will definitely slow you down a bit with weight. Again, you are driving around likely 99% of the time, enjoying the creature comforts of your car. 1% of the time you are racing. Which do you enjoy more? Good tunes and nice ride 99% of the time? Or edging out the guy next to you 1% of the time. It's your call.
17)spoilers? we do not have spoilers which provide any performance increase since all are bad design and fully cosmetic in nature. a inverted aerofoil structure should face the wind for providing aerodynamics many look funny but they work, it starts above 150kmph speed. Useless, unless you live on the autobahn.
-Agreed. Most cars can't go fast enough to take advantage of a spoiler. And if they can, they don't go that fast very often. And most spoilers are strictly for looks, and provide 0 (or very close to 0) in actual downforce, at any speed. Spoilers for looks, that's about all.
18)corner slammers and dtm slammers? lighter cars tend to keep lifting of ground, these give downward force to help keep front wheel on ground. Never seen a car lift its front off the ground.
-Agreed.
Other mods you might want to add:
-NOS -> cheap power gain. Very risky, can blow motor easily if you overdo it (make sure you back timing off a few degrees!).
-Turbo/Supercharger -> High power gains, don't go more than 6-8 psi on a stock motor. If you want to go higher than that, get ready for a seriously $$$ investment in forged internals, sleeves, etc. Turbo will give you most power gain, even at same boost level over a supercharger, thought it will likely be a little more expensive. Could go on, and on, and on, about forced induction, but since this is a bolt-on thread, I probably shouldn't.
