- Joined
- Apr 20, 2011
- Messages
- 2,171
Did he talk about his ride in a drag boat in the book? His one and only wet ride?
Correct - that's a given.But the more nitro you run the longer it will take to burn which turns into degrees of rotation at a given rpm . The trick is to burn all the nitro you put in the fuel . Some guys are using multi plug heads , pulling plug elements out to advance timing , restricting water cooling etc .
Well, Ron & Gene are in Michigan Motorsports HOF, NHRA HOF, and last year the International Drag Racing HOF. My friendship with them started in 1968, sure miss them!
Yes. I will loan it to you when you come back down here.Did he talk about his ride in a drag boat in the book? His one and only wet ride?
Thanks, heading south on Sunday. Still have lots to do after the hurricane but plan to make it to the Nitro Championships but only running 2 classes due to space constraints.Yes. I will loan it to you when you come back down here.
this is it.Correct - that's a given.
Tuning is tuning. Optimization of the tune is optimization of the tune. As the fuel changes (% of nitromethane) the tune needs to change. As the conditions change, the tune needs to change to maintain an "optimal" setup. The more nitromethane, the narrower the tuning window.
Going from 5% to 65% fuel isn't a linear transition, it's more of an exponential curve with things becoming more critical as the percentage increases. This is as much the result of changing the ratio of methanol/nitromethane as it is the increase in nitromethane in the mix. Methanol is a much more forgiving fuel.
That's why I enjoy tuning nitromethane fueled engines and don't care for electric motors. I use battery power in the retrieve boat. No disrespect meant for the electric guys, it's just not my cup of tea.
Speaking of methanol I see VP has M1 and M5, what are you guys using? Any difference?
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