You need more info…..How many feet is 50 rpm for about 50 feet at the end of the straight?
Now if only i had questions like this in math class maybe i would have been a little more engaged .....not that that train station arrival bs.View attachment 16901
1.7" by my math
Hot Rod magazine on top the math book .Now if only i had questions like this in math class maybe i would have been a little more engaged .....not that that train station arrival bs.
Yeah i sat behind you .... Mr Pratt 5th grade 74'Hot Rod magazine on top the math book .
Pencil and paper going furiously ....
Answer: Not enough to buy 20 coils and a dyno for.How many feet is 50 rpm for about 50 feet at the end of the straight?
Assuming that the straight is 1000 feet, the average speed after the corner is 45 mph... Assuming the .5mph increase is linear through out the entire acceleration zone.... 11.06 feet.You mean 20 rpm and how many inches…
Better question is how many feet does a 1/2 mph of corner exit speed equate to down the next straightaway
You mean 20 rpm and how many inches…
Better question is how many feet does a 1/2 mph of corner exit speed equate to down the next straightaway
I would spend thousands to gain 1.7 inchesI'm gonna blindly trust both peoples' internet math, but this proves Gary's point.
You could spend $100s to $1,000s of dollars on engines and coils to gain 1.7 inches or about $50 on a practice day and work on tuning/driving to gain some of that 11 feet. Seems like a no brainer to me.
Dont worry. Someone will still call me (or Comet or Brian or all 3 of us ) today and ask how to get one of those "special" coils.
Negative Sir. Sprint is already eating my lunch, if I tried dirt (and liked it) my wallet would never forgive me, lol.^ or y'all could come over to the dark side (dirt oval racing) 206 or other, "where the best tires win."