Just curious. What is the fastest 1/4 mile in a manual transmission car with a traditional shift pattern that you know of?
Just curious. What is the fastest 1/4 mile in a manual transmission car with a traditional shift pattern that you know of?
my guess:
http://www.2jzpower.com/timeslips/toyota-supra-mkiv-sw-7-91-pass
but apparently the 7.91 pass was made in '09, so...?
That is mind boggling to me. 7 seconds while rowing gears is hugely impressive. It is ea$y to build a fast car, but to launch and shift something and do it that quickly... I can't wrap my head around it.
Also a good way to make drag racing more interesting to watch:
- Require standard transmission with normal H style pattern
- No trans brakes, bump boxes etc.
- No wheelie bars
- No super super sticky tracks.
In reply to aircooled :
I've been down the track a few times, and that is exciting, but I generally find watching drag races pretty boring. Manual H pattern and no wheelie bars might make it more exciting for me.
I just can't get that interested in auto cars with trans brakes and wheelie bars. Just wait for the light and hit the gas. (Yes I know it is more involved and technical, but I just can't make myself care)
aircooled said:Also a good way to make drag racing more interesting to watch:
- Require standard transmission with normal H style pattern
- No trans brakes, bump boxes etc.
- No wheelie bars
- No super super sticky tracks.
Good luck with that. It isn’t fun to watch a smokeshow/pedalfest. Btdt. I still greatly dislike it, but Radial vs the world type class racing is awesome to watch. 315/60 radials with 4000hp running 3.6’s at 220...
While I applaud the h pattern shifting, I can’t in good faith get behind needing $2k clutches either every other pass or third pass... This is why you see automatics when you get faster than 10.0’s... I can easily get a race weekend, 10 passes or so, accomplished for a pittance with an auto vs a manual. And that’s given you need a device to connect the engine to trans and the trans itself for both modes. Again, btdt.
https://youtu.be/aTJj-YaMdsk?t=36
Shepard DSM
https://youtu.be/TWkNrONmOg8?t=24
This is the honda mentioned earlier in the thread, dang..
https://youtu.be/hT-wsqG-edE?t=210
The boostin car, wow.
I dunno. I like $ caps. There are hundreds of ways to go fast on any type of equipment. I like to watch (and race) cars built for cheap. $ is the great equalizer.
Some of the best stick shift racing on the planet is the NMRA's Coyote Stock class. Factory sealed $6700 435hp 302ci NA crate engines on spec gas and spec tune. H-pattern shifters and diaphragm clutches. Automatics are legal, but i don't know of any in the class. Wheelies pretty much every pass, at 3100lbs, they are running 10.0 @ 129!
Here's a link... Coyote Stock Rulebook
weedburner said:Some of the best stick shift racing on the planet is the NMRA's Coyote Stock class. Factory sealed $6700 435hp 302ci NA crate engines on spec gas and spec tune. H-pattern shifters and diaphragm clutches. Automatics are legal, but i don't know of any in the class. Wheelies pretty much every pass, at 3100lbs, they are running 10.0 @ 129!
Here's a link... Coyote Stock Rulebook
As far as I knew the rules changed and slipper clutches and non diaphragm clutches were allowed. You might get 4 passes before changing it out for another fusible link.
Yes, no autos, yet. Trick is finding a converter and trans that will tolerate 9k+ launch and shift points with the given ruleset. C4’s quit about 8200... AOD’s... HAaHAHaha.... And no you can’t use the Joel’s on joy “Ford” powerglide....
In reply to weedburner :
Gen2 coyotes are $7200 and the tune is suckier. Lest not forget a Long G101a will cost you 6500$....
Ranger50 said:weedburner said:Some of the best stick shift racing on the planet is the NMRA's Coyote Stock class. Factory sealed $6700 435hp 302ci NA crate engines on spec gas and spec tune. H-pattern shifters and diaphragm clutches. Automatics are legal, but i don't know of any in the class. Wheelies pretty much every pass, at 3100lbs, they are running 10.0 @ 129!
Here's a link... Coyote Stock Rulebook
As far as I knew the rules changed and slipper clutches and non diaphragm clutches were allowed. You might get 4 passes before changing it out for another fusible link.
Yes, no autos, yet. Trick is finding a converter and trans that will tolerate 9k+ launch and shift points with the given ruleset. C4’s quit about 8200... AOD’s... HAaHAHaha.... And no you can’t use the Joel’s on joy “Ford” powerglide....
Coyote Stock has a 7800 rev limit as part of the spec tune, diaphragm PP's are required for manual trans cars.
A couple years ago, 3 or 4 passes was about the limit for what was then a state of the art clutch setup. Then a couple of the guys starting using my ClutchTamer and all that changed. When they tried to amend the rules to make the ClutchTamer illegal, there was a near mutiny as the guys did not want to go back to pulling the transmission every few runs. They ended up writing the ClutchTamer into the rules the next day.
I have a customer that runs in Factory Stock, which has pretty much the same clutch/converter/transmission rules as Coyote Stock. He ran pretty good last year with a state of the art C4, but this year he switched to a manual with an off-the-shelf SPEC diaphragm clutch controlled by a ClutchTamer. So far this year he has won 3 out of 4 events, and was runner-up in the only one that he didn't win. Last week he brought home $4700 from the rain delayed last couple rounds of the PA event on saturday, another $5000 for the Ohio race on sunday.
Ranger50 said:Good luck with that. It isn’t fun to watch a smokeshow/pedalfest. ...
I don't know about that. To me, much more interesting then the equivalent of watching two cannons fire.
The way I see it, the more difficult it is to do, the more chances of mistakes, and the more likely they are, the more interesting it is to watch.
Replacing a lot of clutches is an issue. Of course, depending on what class you are talking about, they are effectively repairing the cars between runs anyway.
BTW - I am not really a drag racing fan in general, but I do appreciate the extreme automotive / engineering aspects of it.
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