OK, it time for an update as the project seems to be coming to a natural end with driving the car for the first time.
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Although the weather conditions were appalling, it was an excellent test of the car's drive-ability which had been my main worry about the upgrade. In fact, it seemed better behaved than the old engine.

. The Clutch was fine too, maybe a little off or on, but I quickly got used to it.
As the trackday was halted after these laps, I went to HQ Garage to do the SLS yesterday power check with with Russ.
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It gave a wheel HP of 240.2 HP (on a later run not shown in the graph below) which was within a 1 BHP of Northhampton Motorsport figure (in the region of 270-280 BHP at the flywheel). But more importantly, it allowed a direct comparison of pre (red) and post (Blue) exhaust upgrade. I am please with the power, particularly as there's still another 1000 RPM to explore, but it is a little off target for the SLS class B upper limit of 375 WHP/tonne (it came to 386WHP/tonne). I'll either go up to Class A, or put some ballast in.
The exhaust works well and effectively solved the torque delivery issues - easily the single most important component in the upgrade. Also, as it was not cheap, it was a great relief that I made the right call in terms of what was wrong after the initial dyno work.
I've learnt a huge amount doing this - maybe not in putting it together, but certainly in the concepts of tuning and what it really works in the real world. The process of manipulating the torque curve hadn't really be fully appreciated by me at the start. The process of using exhaust primaries, secondaries, and induction length all tuned to different RPMs to make a flat torque curve just makes so much more sense now.
Things I would do differently: I wouldn't have bought a new engine, but would have upgraded the old one. Maybe, kept the old flywheel and clutch. Taken more time to research things. But that's about it.