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pagani
12-08-2007, 12:03 PM
This could be the perfect all round setup street road course and dragstrip all whit one engine.
http://videos.streetfire.net/video/255435ba-3844-4765-909a-99f600dbe477.htm
:-)8-)

yg60m
12-08-2007, 01:46 PM
Impressive beast !! :-) I wonder what it is on the road :huh:

Minacious
12-08-2007, 03:20 PM
That's all well and good, but now I need to see how it puts that power to the ground. Building a Dyno Queen is the relatively easy part. It becomes an entirely different challenge making all of that power work outside of the garage setting.

pagani
12-08-2007, 05:20 PM
That's all well and good, but now I need to see how it puts that power to the ground. Building a Dyno Queen is the relatively easy part. It becomes an entirely different challenge making all of that power work outside of the garage setting.
Dyno is only for tuning.
I agree whit you.
Making the 800 whp real world hp is the challange.
8-):-D

RC45
12-08-2007, 05:45 PM
Those types of cars are literally a dime a dozen out here - just yesterday 2 super charged C6 Z06s where at MTI - this is nothing special - honestly - great to see and hear, but so unbelievably easy to achieve.

The supercharged V8 is wellperfected, these are almost to the point o fbeing "easy bolt together" systems when tackled by knowledgable shops.

The problem as Minacious points out is - "Where do you want to be able to use the power?"

All these supercharged/turbo charged street cars suffer from dreaded heat-soak on a road course, and that results in pulled timing which ends up with less power to the ground.

This car will make an awesome street car, and woul dbe ok for 3 or 4 laps at a time on a road course before needingto be parked to cool off (same is true fo rall the high HP super/turbo cars).

Now an 800rwhp NA setup would be neat ;)

5vz-fe
12-08-2007, 06:17 PM
Why super charge it when you can go NA

Very leanlier power curve btw.

pagani
12-08-2007, 06:46 PM
Those types of cars are literally a dime a dozen out here - just yesterday 2 super charged C6 Z06s where at MTI - this is nothing special - honestly - great to see and hear, but so unbelievably easy to achieve.

The supercharged V8 is wellperfected, these are almost to the point o fbeing "easy bolt together" systems when tackled by knowledgable shops.

The problem as Minacious points out is - "Where do you want to be able to use the power?"

All these supercharged/turbo charged street cars suffer from dreaded heat-soak on a road course, and that results in pulled timing which ends up with less power to the ground.

This car will make an awesome street car, and woul dbe ok for 3 or 4 laps at a time on a road course before needingto be parked to cool off (same is true fo rall the high HP super/turbo cars).

Now an 800rwhp NA setup would be neat ;)
And most turbo cars that run on road course run lower boost and have proper cooling outerwise things will meld very soon
A 800 whp na setup is something for you.

RC45
12-08-2007, 08:18 PM
And most turbo cars that run on road course run lower boost and have proper cooling outerwise things will meld very soon
A 800 whp na setup is something for you.

But as soon as you run "low boost" you are back in NA territory and all the supposed advantage of rnning boost in the forts place is lost.

Now remember, just because you run lower boost does not mean you get rid if all heat soak issues - it just means you can run a little harder for the few laps you do run.

I did a lot of soul searching before I settled on a NA setup- and in the end, I prefered to pay more for an NA setup that makes less power than a cheaper blower setup.

Street running is one thing, but road race course stuff is much tougher on equipment.

I would love to have a 1000 street car, but I know it won't be "all that" on a road course after 5 minutes of thrashing - he'll even the almighty Veyron has to come in to cool down after few laps ;)

(Message posted via iPhone)

pagani
12-09-2007, 12:17 PM
Proper cooling can fix allot of problem's on forced induction car.
But you have to run lower boost.
:-)8-)

RC45
12-09-2007, 01:18 PM
Proper cooling can fix allot of problem's on forced induction car.
But you have to run lower boost.
:-)8-)

I am not trying to be an asshole here - but dont you think the actual companys/racers and people with FI cars don't know this and have tried various approaches? - but the bottom line is you cannot get rid of all the excess heat that affects a streetable pumpgas car. Even the Veyron with its 49 intercoolers and 86 radiators reduces power, pulls timing and slows waaaaaaaay down when it gets hot.

The very point of "running lower bost" defeats the purpose of having a super/turbo charged car to begin with.

To put things into perspective, in 2002 Lingenfelter had a 660bhp Twin Turbo C5 Z06... peple bought them, people loved them - LPE built them - but in a road race situation heat is an issue.

Fast forward 5 years to 2007. A number of people have 660bhp NA C5 and C6 Z06's - without heatsoak issues.

Guess which cars are prefered to be used on road race courses?

You see, it doesnt really matter how little boost you runn (for a turbo) or how big of a pulley you put on the supercharger, compressed air heats up - this heat soaks the engine, the heat soaked engine sufferes from pre-ignition with regular fuels and wold self destruct if the cmpoter never senses the knocking and pulled timing - resulting in the car being hot and slow ;)

Didn't you ever figure out why Best Motoring only ever run 3 laps for the their tests? It's because none of those modded turbo cars can run more than 5 laps before they get hot and slow down :)

pagani
12-09-2007, 02:21 PM
I am not trying to be an asshole here - but dont you think the actual companys/racers and people with FI cars don't know this and have tried various approaches? - but the bottom line is you cannot get rid of all the excess heat that affects a streetable pumpgas car. Even the Veyron with its 49 intercoolers and 86 radiators reduces power, pulls timing and slows waaaaaaaay down when it gets hot.

The very point of "running lower bost" defeats the purpose of having a super/turbo charged car to begin with.

To put things into perspective, in 2002 Lingenfelter had a 660bhp Twin Turbo C5 Z06... peple bought them, people loved them - LPE built them - but in a road race situation heat is an issue.

Fast forward 5 years to 2007. A number of people have 660bhp NA C5 and C6 Z06's - without heatsoak issues.

Guess which cars are prefered to be used on road race courses?

You see, it doesnt really matter how little boost you runn (for a turbo) or how big of a pulley you put on the supercharger, compressed air heats up - this heat soaks the engine, the heat soaked engine sufferes from pre-ignition with regular fuels and wold self destruct if the cmpoter never senses the knocking and pulled timing - resulting in the car being hot and slow ;)

Didn't you ever figure out why Best Motoring only ever run 3 laps for the their tests? It's because none of those modded turbo cars can run more than 5 laps before they get hot and slow down :)

Ok you are right.
But in those 5 laps the turbo cars will smoke as shown most of times in best motoring.
And that best motoring run allways a small numer of laps something i did notice before.
Speaking of best motoring you schould enter your car the american touge event i love see if your corvette can hold it's against the forced inducted competion.
8-):-)

RC45
12-09-2007, 04:03 PM
Ok you are right.
Not me thats right - just the laws of physics ;)


But in those 5 laps the turbo cars will smoke as shown most of times in best motoring.
But on lap 6 the NA car heads off inot the distance ;)


Speaking of best motoring you schould enter your car the american touge event i love see if your corvette can hold it's against the forced inducted competion.
8-):-)
That would be fun - but pretty costly, as they will beat on the car mercilessly (as you see they do with every car they get their hands on) and leave it for dead :P hehe

pagani
12-09-2007, 04:46 PM
Not me thats right - just the laws of physics ;)


But on lap 6 the NA car heads off inot the distance ;)


That would be fun - but pretty costly, as they will beat on the car mercilessly (as you see they do with every car they get their hands on) and leave it for dead :P hehe
Your car could be perfect for the touge just think what the noobs will think when you win in and your car becomes the touge monster and your car is american not japanese.
8-):-D

nthfinity
12-09-2007, 10:06 PM
The main thing is turbo lag on a road course. Race cars have anti lag systems, but a street car doesn't. even on low boost with awesome heat dispersion.

RC45
12-10-2007, 03:12 AM
Na, I haven't seent he guys staying on track long enough for the lag to make a difference ;)

pagani
12-10-2007, 12:18 PM
The main thing is turbo lag on a road course. Race cars have anti lag systems, but a street car doesn't. even on low boost with awesome heat dispersion.
Not all turbo engines have lag you need spec a engine properly and stroke the engine and keep it in the rev band
Just look at the new nissan gtr it has zero lag.

nthfinity
12-10-2007, 12:26 PM
Not all turbo engines have lag you need spec a engine properly and stroke the engine and keep it in the rev band
Just look at the new nissan gtr it has zero lag.

I don't believe that one ounce.

gangajas
12-10-2007, 04:57 PM
Rally cars (not street cars) are equipped with Anti Lag Systems:

http://www.rallycars.com/Cars/bangbang.html

pagani
12-10-2007, 05:22 PM
I kown lots of streetcars whit antilag.
:-)8-)

RC45
12-10-2007, 05:49 PM
I kown lots of streetcars whit antilag.
:-)8-)

Define "street car"?

5vz-fe
12-10-2007, 06:52 PM
Pagani, you should learn how to retreat at certain point.

pagani
12-11-2007, 12:45 PM
Define "street car"?
This is to me a street car.
Mines R34 GTR - YouTube
:-):thumbup:

pagani
12-11-2007, 12:46 PM
Pagani, you should learn how to retreat at certain point.
No i by my points.
:-P

sameerrao
12-11-2007, 12:55 PM
The main thing is turbo lag on a road course. Race cars have anti lag systems, but a street car doesn't. even on low boost with awesome heat dispersion.

I think heat and lack of progressive powerband are bigger issues than turbo lag. It's to do with how you set up the turbos - do you go for max power (i.e. makes the power at top end - like the F40) or max flexibility (like my S4 and the RT12). The latter hardly have much lag to talk about.

In my car, the power comes on at 1950 rpm so there isn't that much a lag so to speak. Yes, you can be caught flatfooted when you are in low rpms and high gear but you will have the same issue in a NA car which is out of its powerband.

nthfinity
12-11-2007, 01:05 PM
^^^^^
This is true, sameer.

This is to me a street car.

:-):thumbup:
Well, with all that understeer, the front tires wont last the same 5 laps the engine will w/out pulling timing. :P

rave426
12-11-2007, 02:09 PM
I dont think there is any production car that doesnt have turbo lag....if it did have an anti-lag system, the gas milage and life of the engine/turbo's would probably be next to nothing. Keeping turbo's spooled probably takes a good bit of energy.

pagani
12-11-2007, 02:14 PM
I think heat and lack of progressive powerband are bigger issues than turbo lag. It's to do with how you set up the turbos - do you go for max power (i.e. makes the power at top end - like the F40) or max flexibility (like my S4 and the RT12). The latter hardly have much lag to talk about.

In my car, the power comes on at 1950 rpm so there isn't that much a lag so to speak. Yes, you can be caught flatfooted when you are in low rpms and high gear but you will have the same issue in a NA car which is out of its powerband.
You are spot on.
It also helps on turbo engine to stroke it to bigger displacement.
A well setup/build turbo engine can just be as good as any na engine.
:-):thumbup:

pagani
12-11-2007, 02:17 PM
^^^^^
This is true, sameer.


Well, with all that understeer, the front tires wont last the same 5 laps the engine will w/out pulling timing. :P
Yes the mines gtr will last 5 laps.
I has no understeer proper setup suspension.
:thumbup::-)

nthfinity
12-11-2007, 02:22 PM
Yes the mines gtr will last 5 laps.
I has no understeer.
:thumbup::-)

Is that the video you linked?

That GTR has tonnnnns of understeer.

pagani
12-11-2007, 02:30 PM
Is that the video you linked?

That GTR has tonnnnns of understeer.
Yes it has belance not understeer.

nthfinity
12-11-2007, 03:12 PM
Yes it has belance not understeer.

If thats what you call balance hehe... its understeering in every turn.

pagani
12-11-2007, 03:27 PM
If thats what you call balance hehe... its understeering in every turn.
That is balance.
Anyway who cares it still on the fastest streetcars round a track.
:-P

79TA
12-11-2007, 05:22 PM
NA is the way to go for endurance orientated racing. Just look at the GT cars in LeMans are stock cars in NASCAR (now there's 800 NA rwhp for you).

However, turbo applications can be made to work for endurance. Dakar is a great example. However, Dakar is so endurance oriented that insane horsepower isn't really the goal. The VW race toureg 2's only make 285 bhp. I should mention though, that they also make a whopping 443 lb-ft of torque that makes the power band nice and broad.

The best way to beat turbo lag is to just start with an engine that is suitable to begin with. By that I mean a V8! hehe. I've always been fond of turbo V6 applications.

RC45
12-11-2007, 05:39 PM
You are spot on.
It also helps on turbo engine to stroke it to bigger displacement.
A well setup/build turbo engine can just be as good as any na engine.
:-):thumbup:

Setup doesnt take away the results of heat soak.

Thats the point here - turbo/supercharged street cars suffer on road rcae courses - high speed/aggressive street driving is nothing like hot lapping a road race course... nothing at all.

On the street there is plenty of time to "cool" the engine - but not so on a track :)

Bring your Mines to Texas - and 5 laps later it will be as anemic and asthmatic as a Hoda Civic Hybrid ;)

pagani
12-11-2007, 05:46 PM
Setup doesnt take away the results of heat soak.

Thats the point here - turbo/supercharged street cars suffer on road rcae courses - high speed/aggressive street driving is nothing like hot lapping a road race course... nothing at all.

On the street there is plenty of time to "cool" the engine - but not so on a track :)

Bring your Mines to Texas - and 5 laps later it will be as anemic and asthmatic as a Hoda Civic Hybrid ;)

Of course turbo cars heat soak in hot weather turbocars need colder to work properly.
The mines skyline gtr has been in the us.

79TA
12-11-2007, 05:53 PM
All engines operate more efficiently in the cold. It's not just a matter of denser air with more oxygen, but the lower temperature plainly allows for better thermodynamic efficiency thanks to the second law. Not overheating is a plus too.

graywolf624
12-11-2007, 08:17 PM
Of course turbo cars heat soak in hot weather turbocars need colder to work properly.
The mines skyline gtr has been in the us.
And thats the point. If youve every hot lapped a car in the summer in a place in the southern US... Well as the driver you'll be baking, just think what the car does. That turbo will heat soak, like the drag cars that have metal plennums, its only a matter of time. FI is generally not used for endurance racing. Mind you they are good fun, but if it could be done without FI for the same weight and cost believe me they would. Pauls point here is with the vette it can. It doesnt take away from the GTR.. The gtr can't, at least to my knowledge, put down 800 bhp na. That vette easily can, its been done by everyone and their brother so to speak.

For all out performance at or near sea level on a road race course for more then a few laps NA>FI for identical setups.

RC45
12-12-2007, 01:35 AM
Of course turbo cars heat soak in hot weather turbocars need colder to work properly.
The mines skyline gtr has been in the us.

Hehe - bring on the cold.. NA I have 660bhp corrected to standard temperature and pressure... thats about 750bhp in cool winter air - and still no heat soak issues :P ;P

pagani
12-12-2007, 09:24 AM
Hehe - bring on the cold.. NA I have 660bhp corrected to standard temperature and pressure... thats about 750bhp in cool winter air - and still no heat soak issues :P ;P
Ok i got the point.
But a turbo engine will make lots of power whit cold denser air.
More than a na engine.
;-)

RC45
12-12-2007, 11:52 AM
Ok i got the point.
But a turbo engine will make lots of power whit cold denser air.
More than a na engine.
;-)

But will be heat soaked within a few laps.

I am not making this up - I promise you. Don't you think if I wanted to have an "800rwhp" car I would have just built one using a super charged/turbo charged LS7 instead of an instead of a 580rwhp NA one? But such a car woul dhave been faced with way more issues hot lapping than I am already facing.

When you ask a tuning shop to help build you a 200mph race/street car, they seldom recommend a forced induction setup.

I am not sure if many folks understand the consept we are discussing - it is where the engine assembly soaks up all the heat produced and the intake charge, even though its been "intercooled" is still relatively warm and combined with the other hear of the boosted engine causes the gasoline to pre-ignite in the cylinders...

the knocking will destroy your motor, so the car;s computer pulls timing and slows the point of ignition - which significantly reduces the engine power.

This process saves the motor but makes the car slow... this is why boosted cars go out for a few laps of fun, then come in to the pits and cool down for long time before heading out again.

It can help to run very high octane race gasoline, but then the car is by definition no longer a street car.

BTW, have you ever seen in the magazine tests how Hennessey always packs his cars engine bays with bags of ice between runs?

Thats right - to reduce the heat soak and aid cooling between runs so he can "make the powaaaaa" - because in the real world a Venom Viper is literally breathless after 5 laps.

:)

pagani
12-12-2007, 12:20 PM
But will be heat soaked within a few laps.

I am not making this up - I promise you. Don't you think if I wanted to have an "800rwhp" car I would have just built one using a super charged/turbo charged LS7 instead of an instead of a 580rwhp NA one? But such a car woul dhave been faced with way more issues hot lapping than I am already facing.

When you ask a tuning shop to help build you a 200mph race/street car, they seldom recommend a forced induction setup.

I am not sure if many folks understand the consept we are discussing - it is where the engine assembly soaks up all the heat produced and the intake charge, even though its been "intercooled" is still relatively warm and combined with the other hear of the boosted engine causes the gasoline to pre-ignite in the cylinders...

the knocking will destroy your motor, so the car;s computer pulls timing and slows the point of ignition - which significantly reduces the engine power.

This process saves the motor but makes the car slow... this is why boosted cars go out for a few laps of fun, then come in to the pits and cool down for long time before heading out again.

It can help to run very high octane race gasoline, but then the car is by definition no longer a street car.

BTW, have you ever seen in the magazine tests how Hennessey always packs his cars engine bays with bags of ice between runs?

Thats right - to reduce the heat soak and aid cooling between runs so he can "make the powaaaaa" - because in the real world a Venom Viper is literally breathless after 5 laps.

:)
Maby a bottle of oxigen is needed on a turbo or supercharged car
Btw did you kown that you can get pump fuel here in europe that has the same rating as most racefuel 102 octane to be precise.
Some cars here run on race fuel because it helps whit detantion and they can run more boost at the dragstrip or road course.
And run a diffrent map when they drive on the street and on pump fuel.

nthfinity
12-12-2007, 12:35 PM
Maby a bottle of oxigen is needed on a turbo or supercharged car
Btw did you kown that you can get pump fuel here in europe that has the same rating as most racefuel 102 octane to be precise.
Some cars here run on race fuel because it helps whit detantion and they can run more boost at the dragstrip or road course.
And run a diffrent map when they drive on the street and on pump fuel.

I know of many local gas stations that sell 110 (mon + ron)/2 , but that doesn't mean its a street car in street tune. ;)

I'm sure if RC were to run 110, he'd be 750 hp in the texas sun :P

sentra_dude
12-12-2007, 12:35 PM
Maby a bottle of oxigen is needed on a turbo or supercharged car
Btw did you kown that you can get pump fuel here in europe that has the same rating as most racefuel 102 octane to be precise.
Some cars here run on race fuel because it helps whit detantion and they can run more boost at the dragstrip or road course.
And run a diffrent map when they drive on the street and on pump fuel.

Fuel octane in Europe is calculated using a different method from the USA, so it is not comparable.

"In the United States, pump octane is an average of 2 ratings, research octane (RON) and motor octane (MON). If you look at any gas pump in the United States, you will see a yellow sticker that says "octane by R + M / 2" That is the basic formula for an average. These 2 numbers mean different things. You could make an analogy to that of a blood pressure reading (systolic and diastolic). Research Octane number is always higher than Motor Octane number.

In Europe, they only report the RON. You may hear people discussing that in Europe, the octane is higher. Well, that is not exactly true. You see, in Europe, you might find 96 octane at a local gas station. (wow 96, highest we have here is 94). Well, that 96 is equivalent to 92 here in the States."

RC45
12-12-2007, 12:49 PM
Maby a bottle of oxigen is needed on a turbo or supercharged car
Btw did you kown that you can get pump fuel here in europe that has the same rating as most racefuel 102 octane to be precise.
Some cars here run on race fuel because it helps whit detantion and they can run more boost at the dragstrip or road course.
And run a diffrent map when they drive on the street and on pump fuel.

Running "race gas on the track with a special tune just for the track" is again, not a street car - by the very definition provided.

I use 104 unleaded Sunoco when I track he car - as insurance against detonation in the extreme conditions of hot lapping - but the car is not "tuned for 104" - it is "tuned for common premium pump gas".

There is no guarentee that when you are out one day that the "special octane" fuel you will need is on sale where you might be - so again, of you paln on driving the car asa true street car on pump gas that can be driven anywhere, it should be tuned for and use common pump gas :)

Otherwise - its a race car ;)

And to get back to the topic, an 800rwph boosted V8 produces HUGE amounts of heat - that has to go somewhere - on the street, you simply upshift and cruise for a few miles, car is cooler and you hit it again - thats not track driving, but can be insane fun on the streets - no argument there.

pagani
12-12-2007, 01:19 PM
Running "race gas on the track with a special tune just for the track" is again, not a street car - by the very definition provided.

I use 104 unleaded Sunoco when I track he car - as insurance against detonation in the extreme conditions of hot lapping - but the car is not "tuned for 104" - it is "tuned for common premium pump gas".

There is no guarentee that when you are out one day that the "special octane" fuel you will need is on sale where you might be - so again, of you paln on driving the car asa true street car on pump gas that can be driven anywhere, it should be tuned for and use common pump gas :)

Otherwise - its a race car ;)

And to get back to the topic, an 800rwph boosted V8 produces HUGE amounts of heat - that has to go somewhere - on the street, you simply upshift and cruise for a few miles, car is cooler and you hit it again - thats not track driving, but can be insane fun on the streets - no argument there.

Ok on a turbo car you play whit the boost levels.
Most turbocars run on the their full on a dyno when they drive it on track the run lower boost.
Their standalone ecu's on the market that have multiple maps.
Example you have map for normal pump fuel.
And you have a second map for racefuel.'
Example of such a ecu.
http://www.motec.com/products/ecu/control.htm
With this kind of ecu you have streetcar or racecar with one ecu.

RC45
12-12-2007, 02:05 PM
Ok on a turbo car you play whit the boost levels.
Most turbocars run on the their full on a dyno when they drive it on track the run lower boost.
That is the very definition of a DYNO-QUEEN.

WHat is the point of posting "a number" then in reality the car doesnt run that on the road/track?


Their standalone ecu's on the market that have multiple maps.
Example you have map for normal pump fuel.
And you have a second map for racefuel.'

This is no longer a street car car then - it is a race modified car driven on the street - huge difference, and also rather pointless in the end.


Example of such a ecu.
http://www.motec.com/products/ecu/control.htm
With this kind of ecu you have streetcar or racecar with one ecu.

So - by the time you have finishd you have $10 or $15,000 in custom race-only control system.

Basically for he price of a new F599 you now have a "custom controlled, dyno queen, high boost not-quite-a-race-car-not-quite-a-street-car" ;)

pagani
12-12-2007, 02:08 PM
The cars that run a motec ecu are far away from a dynoqueen as possible can be.
Most serious cars that can be driven on the street and track.

pagani
12-12-2007, 02:13 PM
That is the very definition of a DYNO-QUEEN.

WHat is the point of posting "a number" then in reality the car doesnt run that on the road/track?


This is no longer a street car car then - it is a race modified car driven on the street - huge difference, and also rather pointless in the end.



So - by the time you have finishd you have $10 or $15,000 in custom race-only control system.

Basically for he price of a new F599 you now have a "custom controlled, dyno queen, high boost not-quite-a-race-car-not-quite-a-street-car" ;)
Example if the engine can deliver 800 whp but you can't run it on 800 whp on road course because the tires spin to much less traction much lower times than you lower the boost so have power amd traction and when you are on dragstrip you can run the full 800 whp.

pagani
12-12-2007, 02:19 PM
example of turbo car on low boost but it still makes 630 whp can't do with a na car.
XS Engineering BNR32 Skyline GT-R at SS Time Attack - YouTube

Second example this is running full power 770 hp
http://www.livevideo.com/video/Pagani/3D20492A44B548EBBD2A90802A53DB1C/fredde-s-ford-escort-cosworth-.aspx

RC45
12-12-2007, 02:55 PM
Example if the engine can deliver 800 whp but you can't run it on 800 whp on road course because the tires spin to much less traction much lower times than you lower the boost so have power amd traction and when you are on dragstrip you can run the full 800 whp.

Tyres spinning has nothing to do with heat soak. And a "lap attack" time is NOT the same as running 50 laps in an afternoon - that car, on high or low boost would be either blown up or severly limited by the time the afternoon sessions roll around at a trackday event.

Street setup boosted cars with full interior, air conditioning and full bodywork suffer from the pains of heat soak that a purposebuilt race car does not.

Again, if heat soak was something easily overcome in a STREET orientated high boost car then there would be NO norally aspirated track day cars.

Every car youuse as an example is NOT a daily driver friendly STREET orientated car - they are purpose built race cars with a few barely street legal addons.

pagani
12-12-2007, 03:08 PM
The first car was a racecar build for the time attack.
And the second car is streetcar whit full interior.

RC45
12-12-2007, 03:13 PM
The first car was a racecar build for the time attack.
And the second car is streetcar whit full interior.

I dont believe that about the second car - please post details of the car, showing it has a full engine bay, is running air conditioning, a stereo and all the other bits and pieces a proper street car runs.

And again - I challange that car to run a full day of road course work without suffering heat soak.

Running a few "drift" parade laps is not the same level of stress on a motor as a day of full throttle orad course work.

Why do youthink the folks drive their Porsche GT2's to the track, then lap in the their GT3's?

:)

pagani
12-12-2007, 03:21 PM
Ok here it go's
Here are some pics of the second car i posted.
Their are porsche gt2 owners that track their cars.
Weight is 1430 kg that is the normal weight for a ford escort cosworth.
~~~images too big
http://memimage.cardomain.net/member_images/11/web/395000-395999/395059_29_full.jpg
http://www.cosworthcrew.com/Fredrikbilder/slides/14.jpg
http://www.cosworthcrew.com/Fredrikbilder/slides/11.jpg
Old dyno sheet of the car.
http://memimage.cardomain.net/member_images/11/web/395000-395999/395059_31_full.jpg
http://thumbs.streetfire.net/ac271aed-7529-455d-9fe4-22291beba9f9.jpg (http://videos.streetfire.net/video/ac271aed-7529-455d-9fe4-22291beba9f9.htm)Cossie Fredde in the fastest Ford! 0-100 3,6sec on street map :pVasteras Airport! (http://videos.streetfire.net/video/ac271aed-7529-455d-9fe4-22291beba9f9.htm)

RC45
12-12-2007, 04:02 PM
Where are the pictures of the engine bay? Doesnt look like it has any license plate or other road worthy certificates or stickers.

And what tyres is it running on the street in street form?

And again, I would like to see that car run more than a few parade laps or pose as a dyno queen :)

I bet it hasn't, and it can't. And a few runs down the runway at the local airfield doesn't count either :)

pagani
12-12-2007, 04:32 PM
Here is your proof.

Engine bay
http://www.cosworthcrew.com/Fredrikbilder/slides/fmotor1.jpg
http://www.cosworthcrew.com/Fredrikbilder/slides/f6.jpg

http://i210.photobucket.com/albums/bb317/pagani1984/S7003478_edited.jpg
YouTube

nthfinity
12-12-2007, 04:35 PM
wow, tons of turbo lag... and doesn't look all that fast on the street. a Dyno queen.

pagani
12-12-2007, 04:49 PM
wow, tons of turbo lag... and doesn't look all that fast on the street. a Dyno queen.
It's low 10 second car on the 1/4 mile.
That is plenty fast to me.
It's not a dyno queen.
You don't kown what a dyno queen is even it it landed for your feet.

nthfinity
12-12-2007, 04:53 PM
It's low 10 second car on the 1/4 mile.
That is plenty fast to me.

755 hp, and only 10s???

What was that old joke about the difference between a ricer with 500 hp and 800 hp? about 2/10th of a second :P

pagani
12-12-2007, 04:54 PM
755 hp, and only 10s???

What was that old joke about the difference between a ricer with 500 hp and 800 hp? about 2/10th of a second :P
Yes for streetcar that is fast here in europe.
Europe and japanese makes the best 4 four banger cars not the us.
Keep your stupid ricer jokes where they belong

nthfinity
12-12-2007, 05:02 PM
Yes for streetcar that is fast here in europe.
Europe and japanese makes the best 4 four banger cars not the us.
Keep your stupid ricer jokes where they belong

755 hp with 2800 or less lbs should be much faster then the low 10's is all that I'm saying. The speakers in the back speak volumes ... ahahahaha, get it? Volumes? LOL

(BTW, I love these "arguments" with you pagani :-D )

pagani
12-12-2007, 05:07 PM
755 hp with 2800 or less lbs should be much faster then the low 10's is all that I'm saying. The speakers in the back speak volumes ... ahahahaha, get it? Volumes? LOL

(BTW, I love these "arguments" with you pagani :-D )
It's a discussion forum after all.
I posted the picture whit the speakers to show it's a real street car.
The problem is he is running the stock gearbox whit a stronger gears.
And he will need a rollcage if wants to run faster than 10 second passed at the strip what a harder this would run a 9 second pass at the strip.
Btw the engine is a four piston yb cosworth engine.
It's has welded up stock diff's.
:-);-)

RC45
12-12-2007, 05:12 PM
It's a discussion forum after all.
I posted the picture whit the speakers to show it's a real street car.
The problem is he is running the stock gearbox whit a stronger gears.
And he will need a rollcage if wants to run faster than 10 second passed at the strip what a harder this would run a 9 second pass at the strip.
Btw the engine is a four piston yb cosworth engine.
:-);-)

I didnt see the air conditioner on in that image.

pagani
12-12-2007, 05:19 PM
I didnt see the air conditioner on in that image.
I'don't kown if it has ac i doubt it.
:-)

RC45
12-12-2007, 05:26 PM
I'don't kown if it has ac i doubt it.
:-)

Then it is not really a Frod Escort street car is it ;) It is a purpose-built show-off car with a big stereo. :)

pagani
12-12-2007, 05:35 PM
Then it is not really a Frod Escort street car is it ;) It is a purpose-built show-off car with a big stereo. :)
No it's not a show car it's a street car
I showed the speakers to show it's real street car i don't kown it he still has the ice setup.
Do show cars run low 10 second passed at the dragstrip?
:-P

RC45
12-12-2007, 05:53 PM
No it's not a show car it's a street car
I showed the speakers to show it's real street car i don't kown it he still has the ice setup.
Do show cars run low 10 second passed at the dragstrip?
:-P

Is there a time slip for thi supposed low 10s time? Or was that "estimated" based on ho whard it pulled on a parade lap? :)

That is a car capable of being driven on the streets (I have to wonder how legally) but it is not a street car. :)

Svensson
12-12-2007, 06:37 PM
Then it is not really a Frod Escort street car is it ;) It is a purpose-built show-off car with a big stereo. :)
RC, I'm with you most of the times here, but this doesn't make any sense :-P

You're saying cars without aircon can not be called street cars? Then I think well over half of the cars driving around Europe don't qualify as street cars. We don't get SoCal temperatures here remember.. ;-)

RC45
12-12-2007, 07:34 PM
RC, I'm with you most of the times here, but this doesn't make any sense :-P

You're saying cars without aircon can not be called street cars? Then I think well over half of the cars driving around Europe don't qualify as street cars. We don't get SoCal temperatures here remember.. ;-)

Thats only because half the cars in europe are entry level 1.1l diesel rustbuckets with barely enough power to get to 60km/h, and could not handle the extra drag of an A/C compressor.

Southern California is not really one of the places I think of when needing air conditioning :)

Svensson
12-12-2007, 07:45 PM
^ I get the point, but I still don't see why an Escort without A/C is not a street car. Especially in freezing Scandinavia. I liked your heat soak arguments better ;-)

RC45
12-12-2007, 08:14 PM
^ I get the point, but I still don't see why an Escort without A/C is not a street car. Especially in freezing Scandinavia. I liked your heat soak arguments better ;-)

Well - I mean if the car came with A/C then it should keep it of course... but I really wonder about cars thatare "claimed to be street cars" but are not.. ;)

graywolf624
12-12-2007, 11:13 PM
Here is your proof.

Engine bay
Even without running the car you can easily tell it will suffer from heat issues. Look at the location of the turbo and the lack of insullation near it as compared to the metal engine. Your friend has even heat shielded the body on the side of the turbo. Which means if he's as into power as you say he is, even he knows that suckers going to put off some heat. Id dare say he suspects it could even get hot enough to melt the inside of that engine bay. Now what do you think that high heat will do to that metal block right next to the turbo? After a few laps that entire underhood area will be so hot he will lose significant power.

79TA
12-13-2007, 04:12 AM
Maby a bottle of oxigen is needed on a turbo or supercharged car
Btw did you kown that you can get pump fuel here in europe that has the same rating as most racefuel 102 octane to be precise.
Some cars here run on race fuel because it helps whit detantion and they can run more boost at the dragstrip or road course.
And run a diffrent map when they drive on the street and on pump fuel.

Running without early detonation and ping is all fine and good but has little to do with heating issues.

A math professor at my school helped develop one of the first active timing retardation systems among other common tuner electronic goodies to address such issues..

pagani
12-13-2007, 12:32 PM
Is there a time slip for thi supposed low 10s time? Or was that "estimated" based on ho whard it pulled on a parade lap? :)

That is a car capable of being driven on the streets (I have to wonder how legally) but it is not a street car. :)
Here is your proof matey boy.
YouTube
:-P

RC45
12-13-2007, 12:37 PM
Here is your proof matey boy.

:-P

A YouTube is not a timeslip ... the car could have had drag radials, race fuel etc etc. :)

I signed timeslip from the track is proof.. :)

nthfinity
12-13-2007, 12:39 PM
A 60 ft. of 1.69 is nearly impossible w/out VERY sticky rubber...

pagani
12-13-2007, 12:48 PM
A 60 ft. of 1.69 is nearly impossible w/out VERY sticky rubber...
It's runs stickey tires at the track and awd very good combo for setting quick 60 ft times.
:-)

RC45
12-13-2007, 03:26 PM
It's runs stickey tires at the track and awd very good combo for setting quick 60 ft times.
:-)

So it was not in street legal form for that run then. :)

It was in drag race car trim. :)

pagani
12-13-2007, 03:38 PM
So it was not in street legal form for that run then. :)

It was in drag race car trim. :)
It's used road legal stickey tires on the strip.
Here are the tires it used on the track
http://www.nexternal.com/bimmerworl/images/z211l.jpg

Here is the road tire is used
http://www.performanceplustire.com/imagesProducts3/2432.jpg

So that means it's street legal on that dragrun.
:-)

pagani
12-13-2007, 03:39 PM
So it was not in street legal form for that run then. :)

It was in drag race car trim. :)
road legal dragrace trim.

RC45
12-13-2007, 03:43 PM
road legal dragrace trim.

Is it driven on the public streets in that trim?

A simple "yes" or "no" would suffice.

nthfinity
12-13-2007, 03:47 PM
Is it driven on the public streets in that trim?

A simple "yes" or "no" would suffice.

Impossible to know for sure, but... based on the videos on the street, it struggles for grip.

pagani
12-13-2007, 03:51 PM
Is it driven on the public streets in that trim?

A simple "yes" or "no" would suffice.

Yes but he fits the his road wheels and add the rear spoiler because drag is not a big problem on the street.

pagani
12-13-2007, 03:52 PM
Impossible to know for sure, but... based on the videos on the street, it struggles for grip.
The car on street was diffrent car but with almost the same engine.
:-)

sameerrao
12-13-2007, 04:23 PM
You guys are nuts .... enough of the petty arguing :)

pagani
12-13-2007, 04:50 PM
You guys are nuts .... enough of the petty arguing :)
Somehow i think you are right.
I we don't stop this will go on forever.

nthfinity
12-13-2007, 05:20 PM
Somehow i think you are right.
I we don't stop this will go on forever.

that is part of the fun :)

pagani
12-13-2007, 05:27 PM
that is part of the fun :)
That is also true.
:-P

Minacious
12-13-2007, 05:31 PM
There is nothing wrong with a friendly debate, when it remains adult.

pagani
12-13-2007, 05:44 PM
There is nothing wrong with a friendly debate, when it remains adult.
I try to keep it that way.
:-D

79TA
12-17-2007, 05:51 AM
755 hp, and only 10s???

What was that old joke about the difference between a ricer with 500 hp and 800 hp? about 2/10th of a second :P

^^^oh man, classic :laugh::laugh::laugh:

Yea, that's the trouble with a lot of tuners, ricers, or people who like tons of boost and no displacement. They tend not to make horsepower over a broad or useful enough range.

pagani
12-17-2007, 11:56 AM
What ever
:-P:-P:-P:-P:-P

pagani
12-17-2007, 12:01 PM
^^^oh man, classic :laugh::laugh::laugh:

Yea, that's the trouble with a lot of tuners, ricers, or people who like tons of boost and no displacement. They tend not to make horsepower over a broad or useful enough range.
Ricer and tuners are not the same.
Not every import car runs tons of boost.

RC45
12-17-2007, 12:56 PM
Ricer and tuners are not the same.
Not every import car runs tons of boost.

If they want any hope of being remotely quick they do ;)

pagani
12-17-2007, 01:33 PM
If they want any hope of being remotely quick they do ;)
Whit a stroked engine you don't need to run high turbo boost.

79TA
12-17-2007, 10:04 PM
Ricer and tuners are not the same.
Not every import car runs tons of boost.

I'm quite aware of that. However, the 4 bangers only make their big power numbers when they get a little impractical with boost.

Stroked engine . . . stroked out to what, a whopping 3.0 litres? Next comes the LS1 swap.

RC45
12-17-2007, 10:28 PM
I'm quite aware of that. However, the 4 bangers only make their big power numbers when they get a little impractical with boost.

Stroked engine . . . stroked out to what, a whopping 3.0 litres? Next comes the LS1 swap.

3l? How would you get that ? Adding 2 more cylinders? ;) I think a "stroked" ricer is like a 2.2l version of a 2l power plant hehe.. ;)

I do believe that the stroked version my motor would have a crank throw the same length as a ricers suspension travel hehehe

pagani
12-21-2007, 11:27 AM
I'm quite aware of that. However, the 4 bangers only make their big power numbers when they get a little impractical with boost.

Stroked engine . . . stroked out to what, a whopping 3.0 litres? Next comes the LS1 swap.
3,0 or 3,4 litre is all you need on a import hot rod.