OVERKILL
$100 Site Donor 2021
Originally Posted By: Duffman77
Even worse your trying to race a math formula.
And you are trying to race what here, a legacy? I'll take math over heartstrings any day. Have you ever actually drag raced? I'm thinking no........
I'm FAR from a hardcore dragracer. I've only been to the track a maybe a handful or so times. But I've seen enough timeslips, done enough of my own modding and talked to enough guys who race to know quite well as to the relationship between power and trap speed.
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The problem with your formula is it breaks horsepower to one dimension. We are not talking racing CVTs here. For 99.9% of engines Horsepower is a function of RPM. Your formula doesn't account for transmission gear ratios or final drives.
It doesn't need to. Those affect ET. Again, you obviously don't drag race. I cut awesome MPH's and awful ET's because I had the stock 3.08 gears in the car. Some 3.73's or 4.10's would have caused my ET to plummet, but my MPH would have stayed the same. A good friend of mine had an '89 notch that couldn't run my MPH if its life depended on it. The engine just wasn't as healthy. But he ET'd better than me (high 13's) because he had 3.73's out back.
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The 283hp Fuelie had the "Duntov cam", meaning its likely a more peaky engine than the one that was sold in 90's mustangs which would require more drive ability for the masses. There us no doubt in my mind that the 302 HO has more area under the curve.
There's no doubt in my mind the 302HO made more power everywhere. It also made more torque. It was a 30 year newer roller engine, so it shouldn't be surprising
Look at the freakin' LS1!!
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Again compare 14.3 @ 100 mph to other cars of the musclecar era, some of them with net ratings. Even though the vette at 2800 (+200 driver = 3000 lbs) is a very light car, there is no way its turning those times with 217 hp net.
And why not?
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I checked a different book of mine and it quotes a Car Life Magazine test of a 1969 Boss 429 at 14.09 @ 102.85 mph. Similar mph, I guess it only has 3800/3000 x 217 = 275 ish Net horsepower as well?
Yup. There were two versions of the BOSS 429. The first run had a tiny baby camshaft that neutered the car. 275HP is probably about right for that one. The 2nd run had a larger SFT stick in it and was a lot faster, and trapped a lot higher.
Even worse your trying to race a math formula.
And you are trying to race what here, a legacy? I'll take math over heartstrings any day. Have you ever actually drag raced? I'm thinking no........
I'm FAR from a hardcore dragracer. I've only been to the track a maybe a handful or so times. But I've seen enough timeslips, done enough of my own modding and talked to enough guys who race to know quite well as to the relationship between power and trap speed.
Quote:
The problem with your formula is it breaks horsepower to one dimension. We are not talking racing CVTs here. For 99.9% of engines Horsepower is a function of RPM. Your formula doesn't account for transmission gear ratios or final drives.
It doesn't need to. Those affect ET. Again, you obviously don't drag race. I cut awesome MPH's and awful ET's because I had the stock 3.08 gears in the car. Some 3.73's or 4.10's would have caused my ET to plummet, but my MPH would have stayed the same. A good friend of mine had an '89 notch that couldn't run my MPH if its life depended on it. The engine just wasn't as healthy. But he ET'd better than me (high 13's) because he had 3.73's out back.
Quote:
The 283hp Fuelie had the "Duntov cam", meaning its likely a more peaky engine than the one that was sold in 90's mustangs which would require more drive ability for the masses. There us no doubt in my mind that the 302 HO has more area under the curve.
There's no doubt in my mind the 302HO made more power everywhere. It also made more torque. It was a 30 year newer roller engine, so it shouldn't be surprising


Quote:
Again compare 14.3 @ 100 mph to other cars of the musclecar era, some of them with net ratings. Even though the vette at 2800 (+200 driver = 3000 lbs) is a very light car, there is no way its turning those times with 217 hp net.
And why not?
Quote:
I checked a different book of mine and it quotes a Car Life Magazine test of a 1969 Boss 429 at 14.09 @ 102.85 mph. Similar mph, I guess it only has 3800/3000 x 217 = 275 ish Net horsepower as well?
Yup. There were two versions of the BOSS 429. The first run had a tiny baby camshaft that neutered the car. 275HP is probably about right for that one. The 2nd run had a larger SFT stick in it and was a lot faster, and trapped a lot higher.