kivik
12-02-07, 11:17
Nie ma jakiegos ogolnego podforum wiec postanowilem napisac to tutaj, moze kogos zainteresuje pare faktów o TOP FUEL.
Zkopiowalem to z honda-tech :
• Current top fuel cars make about 8000hp and burn between 75-80 gallons of fuel per run.
• Crank case breathers feed into a 5 gallon catch can. It is half full after one pass.
• When two top fuel cars leave the line together, it measures 2.5 on the Richter scale.
• Teams wait until just before their qualifying session to assemble the engine: they tune for weather & track conditions with different thickness head gaskets that change compression. The head gaskets they use for tuning are sized in .001" increments!
• Top fuel cars do not use multi-geared transmissions. They are direct drive and use a multi-plate centrifugal clutch just like a go-kart. NHRA mandates a 8250rpm redline. So they leave the line at 8250rpm and by the time they reach the finish (about 4.5 seconds later) the clutch and aero-drag "slows" the engine down to about 7000rpm at 330mph.
• It takes 1000hp just to move the rear wing thru the air at 330mph
• Initial spark advance is set at 53 degrees before TDC. (The fuel burns a lot slower than gas and the combustion chambers are nearly the size of my attic...)
• There is a wheel speed sensor on the left front wheel. One of their tuning guides is reading the length of time it is off he ground from due to the torque and flex of the chassis.
• One chassis is good for 100 runs until it is retired.
• Listening to Tony Schumacher give a motivational speech before a couple hundred new army recruits, I had a lump in my throat and was ready to enlist myself. The US Army is getting every penny's worth from drag racing.
But all the money and effort involved to get that 4.5 second rush has got to make drag racing the worst bang for the buck in all of motor sports. Impressed I was. Envious, I was not.
Nie mam zielonego pojecia czy to prawda. Spalanie na poziomie 75-80 galonow wydaje sie nieprawdopodobne.
W kazdym razie jezeli to prawda to niezle tam chlopcy kombinuja - a funu tylko 4.5 sec, chyba ze hamowanie to tez atrakcja ;)
Zkopiowalem to z honda-tech :
• Current top fuel cars make about 8000hp and burn between 75-80 gallons of fuel per run.
• Crank case breathers feed into a 5 gallon catch can. It is half full after one pass.
• When two top fuel cars leave the line together, it measures 2.5 on the Richter scale.
• Teams wait until just before their qualifying session to assemble the engine: they tune for weather & track conditions with different thickness head gaskets that change compression. The head gaskets they use for tuning are sized in .001" increments!
• Top fuel cars do not use multi-geared transmissions. They are direct drive and use a multi-plate centrifugal clutch just like a go-kart. NHRA mandates a 8250rpm redline. So they leave the line at 8250rpm and by the time they reach the finish (about 4.5 seconds later) the clutch and aero-drag "slows" the engine down to about 7000rpm at 330mph.
• It takes 1000hp just to move the rear wing thru the air at 330mph
• Initial spark advance is set at 53 degrees before TDC. (The fuel burns a lot slower than gas and the combustion chambers are nearly the size of my attic...)
• There is a wheel speed sensor on the left front wheel. One of their tuning guides is reading the length of time it is off he ground from due to the torque and flex of the chassis.
• One chassis is good for 100 runs until it is retired.
• Listening to Tony Schumacher give a motivational speech before a couple hundred new army recruits, I had a lump in my throat and was ready to enlist myself. The US Army is getting every penny's worth from drag racing.
But all the money and effort involved to get that 4.5 second rush has got to make drag racing the worst bang for the buck in all of motor sports. Impressed I was. Envious, I was not.
Nie mam zielonego pojecia czy to prawda. Spalanie na poziomie 75-80 galonow wydaje sie nieprawdopodobne.
W kazdym razie jezeli to prawda to niezle tam chlopcy kombinuja - a funu tylko 4.5 sec, chyba ze hamowanie to tez atrakcja ;)