Re: Joe Sorenson
Quote:
At least I'm glad that they changed the heads. Must be a "west coast" rulebook thing. ;-) |
Re: Joe Sorenson
I stated wrong information on head interchangeably. My apologies
The hood deal I have a little first hand knowledge how NHRA treated the E Body Cuda. If I ran one engine the car had to have this one hood. If I used a different engine I had a choice of two hoods but was not allowed to run the first hood. But if that interpretation has been removed I wish they would have published it. What is OEM equipment on a 1969 Camaro, I have no idea. Congratulations gentleman on your well earned Championship |
Re: Joe Sorenson
Quote:
|
Re: Joe Sorenson
Quote:
|
Re: Joe Sorenson
Quote:
|
Re: Joe Sorenson
Quote:
I'm calling BS on that one. It didn't come from the same guy who came up with the paperwork for the 780 Holleys and Edelbrock intakes on the AMCs did it? |
Re: Joe Sorenson
Quote:
As far as the charging system and the drawdown effect it all depends on a whole host of items in your charging system of course (size and total cranking amps of the battery and charge state of the battery (how many time@ you start the car from pit to line), size, type and charging amps of your alternator, type and amps draw of those headlights, and how many headlights/tail lights and marker lights you turn on...in my case all of em...High beams or low, regulator type, etc. But, it can certainly shave off thousandths to a couple of hundredths at the tree on the leave and turn just red to a decent green. 200rpm less stall speed usually does the same for me, but 500 killed both the light and knocked off too much on the 60' too. Somehow my right foot moved when bumping in with the left. Lessons learned. Pulling on a light switch would sure be easier to accomplish with less risk. And each must find their own ways to adjust. When a blink of your eyes takes 2.5 tenths of a second to accomplish, and the difference between red/green is so minute your brain cannot possibly comprehend or adjust your body a couple of thou, mechanical or biological changes must be applied. Not genius, not tricks, just good/bad strategy. |
Re: Joe Sorenson
Ya know, just to put an end to this, I don't really care about the "missing" SS hood. If anything it would take away from the engine. As long as I know that NHRA looked at the car and it had the correct heads for the combo claimed and class claimed then I'm OK with it.
Again, congratulations Hal and Joe! |
Re: Joe Sorenson
Quote:
I am not stating I know anything about Camaro hoods or engine combos here at all, just pointing out the inconsistent ways NHRA deals with documentation and evidence, specs. If the evidence exists look at it in all cases and rule on it, then publish it for all to use. But, that takes work. Laziness and economics rules the day these days it seems. Fairness to all takes a back seat. |
Re: Joe Sorenson
First off Congrats to Joe and Hal
Well deserved for two guys who actually assemble their own engines and transmissions. About the hood } I have a good friend who bought a used Camaro (68, not 69). It was ordered with a 295 / 350 engine, Powerglide trans, column shifter, bench seat, and small dog dish style hubcaps . It was badged as a SS car, but sure didn't look it from a few feet away. . Anyway , it DID have the raised hood with the chrome simulated ports inserts on it. I wonder if the original buyer knew you could un-order the heavier SS hood? Again this was a 68 car. Interesting ! Also , we raced a 68 Chevy II ,that was ordered as a big block car ,with rubber floor mats . We ran it as a 350 /295 PG combo. Of course it had to have the SS hood on it. As a matter of fact, as long as I've been racing, which is more than a few years, anything that came from GM @ 295 horse or more had to have a SS hood , or cowl induction on Camaros Again, very interesting ...Who knew? |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:53 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright Class Racer.com. All Rights Reserved. Designated trademarks and brands are the property of their respective owners.