Re: New cars, old cars and horsepower ratings.
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Re: New cars, old cars and horsepower ratings.
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Re: New cars, old cars and horsepower ratings.
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Re: New cars, old cars and horsepower ratings.
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Very few can do each cylinder properly. It is slightly more exact than a carb car with staggered jetting, but that isn't all you are limited to on a carb car. You still have the ability to advance and retard timing to each cylinder and/or hotter/colder staggered plugs. |
Re: New cars, old cars and horsepower ratings.
You can, most don't. You do know how to stagger jet a carb, right? If you don 't, you need to learn how. We were doing that in the 1970s. Sharper guys before that, I'm sure. Tuned properly, that turbo car would be at least as fast in open loop. If his ECU has to make adjustments going down the track he hasn't done a real good job of tuning it.
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Re: New cars, old cars and horsepower ratings.
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Re: New cars, old cars and horsepower ratings.
OK, we got a lot of comments, suggestions and complaints, but here is MY list of what makes sense so far:
1. The new cars are not a problem for the RACER because they are new, it's because the HP factors are totally out of the ballpark. 2. The manufacturers have a vested interest in the new cars dominating class racing, so they stacked the HP deck, and NHRA allowed it. 3. AFHS is working too slowly, and the FI, Computer and carbureted cars have different tools available to tune, and different infrastructures for their building and race support. 4. The cost of entering the "new" car classes is prohibitive for most of the Sportsman racers that have been racing their favorite car for a long time, stacking the S/SS ranks with "bucks up" supported teams and individuals.... this is a disincentive for the longtime participants in S/SS, who are now at a competitive disadvantage in both performance and money. Am I on point so far??? Suggestions for fixes follow on next post. Sorry, I accidentally duplicated this post..... |
Re: New cars, old cars and horsepower ratings.
OK, we got a lot of comments, suggestions and complaints, but here is MY list of what makes sense so far:
1. The new cars are not a problem for the RACER because they are new, it's because the HP factors are totally out of the ballpark. 2. The manufacturers have a vested interest in the new cars dominating class racing, so they stacked the HP deck, and NHRA allowed it. 3. AFHS is working too slowly, and the FI, Computer and carbureted cars have different tools available to tune, and different infrastructures for their building and race support. 4. The cost of entering the "new" car classes is prohibitive for most of the Sportsman racers that have been racing their favorite car for a long time, stacking the S/SS ranks with "bucks up" supported teams and individuals.... this is a disincentive for the longtime participants in S/SS, who are now at a competitive disadvantage in both performance and money. Am I on point so far??? Suggestions for fixes follow on next post |
Re: New cars, old cars and horsepower ratings.
#3 covers two different subjects, but otherwise pretty close.
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Re: New cars, old cars and horsepower ratings.
Alright, here is my take on the suggestions so far....
I think a good solution is emerging among the comments, especially when you combine idieas from Bad Banana, Capt Cobrajet, Jeff, Sammy, 442Olds and X-Tech who are all kinda in the same framework, and Myron, who also addresses the marketing side (which the Big 3 are primarily interested in). Just trying to give credit where it is due 1. Factors need to be examined and adjusted ASAP. I would suggest reviewing these by going thru this year's runs and making the adjustments over the Winter. 1a. New cars need HP, older cars need WT break. (You could do one or the other, but a combo is probably the most fair, let old cars lighten up some, and add HP to the newer ones. 1/8 mile performances from this year are probably the fairest assessement) 2. FI/Computer cars need to run in their own classes, the TOOLS to make adjustments are in a different league from the carbureted cars and they definitely have an advantage in ease of adjustment and precision over the older cars - level 'em out by letting them compete with each other in class eliminatons. 2a. Supercharged cars need to be in their own class - period. 3. Readjust the indexes so they are more realistic. (Something on the order of .5 seems to make sense to me... cars should not routinely be .8 - 1.2 under.) 4. More classes and crate motors are not a good solution, this would dilute classes and make the eliminator even more difficult to monitor and manage... not what we need. 5. Better media coverage of the S/SS would give manufacturers the exposure they crave. Old idea, not likely to get much play, but a joint NHRA/Racer committee should be looking over this stuff on an ongoing basis, and have seasonal meetings to assess and make changes, with racer representation in the form of divisional delegates to vote. The actual number and structure of this body would need to be "discussed" and agreed on.... These measures seem to cover most of the bases fairly and are doable, if the will to do so is there on the part of NHRA At the very least, they suggest a workable framework for improvement.... just one racer's opinion I think if these measured are done realistically, we could make S/SS much better for everybody.... |
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