Engine Cuts at 120
Re: Engine Cuts at 120
hey...anyone know if the Vette pulls in 6th?
Since its more aerodynamic and a little lighter.....
EDIT:
Just one more reason to hurry up and do that cam swap
Since its more aerodynamic and a little lighter.....
EDIT:
Originally Posted by CoUnTryMuZiCZ28
If you have enough power you can push it.. But other wise on any bolt on car or even bolt on with a small cam cant push it..
Last edited by stone4779; Aug 14, 2004 at 12:01 PM.
Re: Engine Cuts at 120
Originally Posted by stone4779
hey...anyone know if the Vette pulls in 6th?
Since its more aerodynamic and a little lighter.....
EDIT:
Just one more reason to hurry up and do that cam swap
Since its more aerodynamic and a little lighter.....
EDIT:
Just one more reason to hurry up and do that cam swap
Weight will not affect top speed, just how quickly you get there. Better aerodynamics are the key to that one and I suspect that even the Vettes slightly more slippery shape will not be enough to pull 6th. 6th gear is just too tall for that at stock power levels.
Re: Engine Cuts at 120
Originally Posted by audiopro
Any idea what someone would charge to program the pcm to remove that?

118 MPH is the speed limiter for non z-rated tire equipped cars.
Re: Engine Cuts at 120
Originally Posted by trackbird
Weight will not affect top speed, just how quickly you get there. Better aerodynamics are the key to that one and I suspect that even the Vettes slightly more slippery shape will not be enough to pull 6th. 6th gear is just too tall for that at stock power levels.
As to 6th gear that depends on what the final gear ratio is, where a 2.73 will get more top end speed but 6th gear is useless but try it with a 4.10 gear and 6th becomes useable but less overall top end.
As to the Corvette, my '99 has pulled 194 MPH and with a bit less angle on rear wing I suspect to spike the 200, this is in open road racing, 100 miles of a public road are used.
Re: Engine Cuts at 120
Originally Posted by 6speedZ28
Wrong, you could indeed get a z-rated 16in tire option on the Z28. They came with P245/50/ZR16 Good Year GSC's. Those cars were not speed limited to 120mph. The cars that were came with A P235 series tire, they were Good Year RSA's.....they were not z-rated.
I believe it had something to do with the gear ratio. The auto cars with 2.73's were speed limited, where as the auto cars with 3.23's got the z-rated and the 6 speed cars also got the z-rated
I believe it had something to do with the gear ratio. The auto cars with 2.73's were speed limited, where as the auto cars with 3.23's got the z-rated and the 6 speed cars also got the z-rated
This is my first post over here but FWIW I bought my car brand new A4 w/2:73's and the P245/50/ZR16 Good Year GSC's. Had it up to 125 walkin' a 'Stang up I-75 with alot more to go.
Mine was a unique build though (I think)Again FWIW audiopro at a minimum go with a Predator. If you have the time to learn, then HP Tuner. If you get a Hypertech you'll just end up wanting to go further with PCM mod's. I know first-hand!
Re: Engine Cuts at 120
Originally Posted by Team ZR1
my '99 has pulled 194 MPH and with a bit less angle on rear wing I suspect to spike the 200
Originally Posted by Team ZR1
Weight does have an effect on top speed, simply called engine load, the less weight the lighter the engine load, will pull more speed.
Originally Posted by Team ZR1
my '99 has pulled 194 MPH and with a bit less angle on rear wing I suspect to spike the 200
Otherwise, I'd think you are trying to say that if I could drive a vehicle in a vacuum (with no air drag) it would still have a top speed limit based on weight? Where is the physics behind that one? I'm asking, because I've never seen a top speed calculation that involved weight. The top speed of an object (such as a vehicle) in a vacuum with no air drag would be essentially "infinite" (ok, gear limited and/or we break into Einstiens realm). Weight would only affect the rate of acceleration, not the maximum velocity. Right?
The rate of acceleration has to account for weight, but not top speed.
And, I'm not trying to start an arguement, I just wanted clarification of your thoughts on this one.
Last edited by trackbird; Aug 16, 2004 at 11:19 PM.
Re: Engine Cuts at 120
Originally Posted by Team ZR1
Weight does have an effect on top speed, simply called engine load, the less weight the lighter the engine load, will pull more speed.
AERODYNAMIC DRAG is the limiting factor when it comes to top speed. Actually its a combonation of HP and Aero drag. HP and speed are inverse square of each other. In laymans terms, it takes 4x's as much HP to go twice as fast. The load on the engine is created from the aerodynamic drag on the car. You can make changes to rear wings, air dams etc to increase your top speed but at the same time you are making the car less stable at those speeds by DECREASING THE AERODYNAMIC DRAG. You are NOT decreasing the weight of the vehicle. The NEGATIVE LIFT (see: DOWNFORCE) will cause increased PRESSURE on the car BUT THERE IS NO PHYSICAL WEIGHT CHANGE of the vehicle itself.
Take a given vehicle on a given chassis combo at say 3500lbs. Get it to TERMINAL VELOCITY, say for talking purposes 200mph . NOW, go and remove 1000lbs from the vehicle. The vehicle now weighs in at a scant 2500lbs. Now get it to 200mph.....The car will still NOT exceed 200mph without AERODYNAMIC changes to the car that DECREASE the amount of resistance and/or DRAG. The drag on the car will be the limiting factor NOT the weight of the vehicle.
Example: Todd Carpenters UNL. Class camaro. This car has seen sustained speeds of 215mph. When he went hunting for another 5mph he DID NOT start yanking weight out of the vehicle. He started by pulling the rearview mirros, taping body seems, removed his rear spoiler (which he almost regreted) and added MORE HP. Weight isnt his problem, even at a lofty 4200lbs, it is the drag that his car is creating at high speeds when it punches a big hole through the air.
If your concerned about the weight of your car........go drag racing. In ORR weight doesnt mean ****. The only thing weight will effect is response time on your suspension. BUT IF you took this into consideration PRIOR to building the car, its not even a concern.
The concerns you need to have for running at top speed is finding the perfect balance between drag and downforce. Then you throw the HP in the mix to get it up there.
As to 6th gear that depends on what the final gear ratio is, where a 2.73 will get more top end speed but 6th gear is useless but try it with a 4.10 gear and 6th becomes useable but less overall top end.
To be able to pull with a 2.73 rear gear you better have a TRAIN LOAD and I mean a fricken TRAIN LOAD of hp. I know guys in the ORR world make WELL in excess of 650rwhp and fight to pull 210+mph with a 3.08 rear gear.
Making a high speed pass with gearing as deep as 4.10 is just plain ignorant. You are risking serious engine and drive train failure by doing it. Not even mentioning the critical driveshaft speed will go WELL beyond what just about any driveshaft is capable of handling.
As to the Corvette, my '99 has pulled 194 MPH and with a bit less angle on rear wing I suspect to spike the 200, this is in open road racing, 100 miles of a public road are used
Re: Engine Cuts at 120
Weight has ZERO to do with top speed, WOW,
you would be correct if you had unlimited distance to prove that but in all other cases you would lose.
If the engine had 400 HP and car weighted 3300 lbs that would equal 8.25 lbs per HP.
If the car weighted only 2300 lbs then that would be only 5.75 lbs each HP had to support.
If I now added a rear wing and for each 1 degree of upward angle it was set to would equal another 100 POUNDS of weight onto the car, thus 5 degrees, 500 lbs, you add that to the rolling resistance and the lighter car will have the top end speed, not the heavy one.
Salt flats, the cara are heavy, but they also have tons more HP for the sole purpose is to use that weight to reduce lift and maintain traction.
If I took a Corvette that weighted 3300 and another exactly the same EXCEPT it weights 2300 lbs the following simulator results would happen in the real world and as can be seen the vette weighing 3300 lbs loses not only in elapsed time but also distance it took to get to the same speed and if a rear wing was used it would be worse.
If the distance, IE was salt flats was 3 miles the heavier car would not get to the top speed as lighter car did since it would take about another mile to get to the same speed, if the engine was able to with added wind resistance.
Vette on left is 2300 lbs and vette on right is 3300 lbs

As another example I custom tuned a airplane that had two props, the engine is a C5R with a turbo, it required at least 600 HP to stay in the air, the 1st tests and the plane was a bit shy in HP at the rotor tips and the only way they got it to work correctly was to reduce the weight to HP ratio.
As to ORRing we do not reduce the weight for nothing and I have done every ORR event in Nv and Tx, Silver state, PE100, Big Bend, Gamblers run, etc.
My GM/Mobil I Snakeskinner ZR-1 went from 3.600 lbs to 2,600 lbs and
thanks but I'll keep the weight off.
you would be correct if you had unlimited distance to prove that but in all other cases you would lose.
If the engine had 400 HP and car weighted 3300 lbs that would equal 8.25 lbs per HP.
If the car weighted only 2300 lbs then that would be only 5.75 lbs each HP had to support.
If I now added a rear wing and for each 1 degree of upward angle it was set to would equal another 100 POUNDS of weight onto the car, thus 5 degrees, 500 lbs, you add that to the rolling resistance and the lighter car will have the top end speed, not the heavy one.
Salt flats, the cara are heavy, but they also have tons more HP for the sole purpose is to use that weight to reduce lift and maintain traction.
If I took a Corvette that weighted 3300 and another exactly the same EXCEPT it weights 2300 lbs the following simulator results would happen in the real world and as can be seen the vette weighing 3300 lbs loses not only in elapsed time but also distance it took to get to the same speed and if a rear wing was used it would be worse.
If the distance, IE was salt flats was 3 miles the heavier car would not get to the top speed as lighter car did since it would take about another mile to get to the same speed, if the engine was able to with added wind resistance.
Vette on left is 2300 lbs and vette on right is 3300 lbs

As another example I custom tuned a airplane that had two props, the engine is a C5R with a turbo, it required at least 600 HP to stay in the air, the 1st tests and the plane was a bit shy in HP at the rotor tips and the only way they got it to work correctly was to reduce the weight to HP ratio.
As to ORRing we do not reduce the weight for nothing and I have done every ORR event in Nv and Tx, Silver state, PE100, Big Bend, Gamblers run, etc.
My GM/Mobil I Snakeskinner ZR-1 went from 3.600 lbs to 2,600 lbs and
thanks but I'll keep the weight off.
Originally Posted by NataSS Inc
Weight has ZERO effect on top speed. Why do you think salt flat car very commonly weigh in at over 5-6 thousand pounds. Weight has EVERYTHING to do with acceleration. NASCAR rigs weigh in at 4K and will exceed 200mph. BUT they sure dont pull a quick 1/4 mile given the hp of the car.
AERODYNAMIC DRAG is the limiting factor when it comes to top speed. Actually its a combonation of HP and Aero drag. HP and speed are inverse square of each other. In laymans terms, it takes 4x's as much HP to go twice as fast. The load on the engine is created from the aerodynamic drag on the car. You can make changes to rear wings, air dams etc to increase your top speed but at the same time you are making the car less stable at those speeds by DECREASING THE AERODYNAMIC DRAG. You are NOT decreasing the weight of the vehicle. The NEGATIVE LIFT (see: DOWNFORCE) will cause increased PRESSURE on the car BUT THERE IS NO PHYSICAL WEIGHT CHANGE of the vehicle itself.
Take a given vehicle on a given chassis combo at say 3500lbs. Get it to TERMINAL VELOCITY, say for talking purposes 200mph . NOW, go and remove 1000lbs from the vehicle. The vehicle now weighs in at a scant 2500lbs. Now get it to 200mph.....The car will still NOT exceed 200mph without AERODYNAMIC changes to the car that DECREASE the amount of resistance and/or DRAG. The drag on the car will be the limiting factor NOT the weight of the vehicle.
Example: Todd Carpenters UNL. Class camaro. This car has seen sustained speeds of 215mph. When he went hunting for another 5mph he DID NOT start yanking weight out of the vehicle. He started by pulling the rearview mirros, taping body seems, removed his rear spoiler (which he almost regreted) and added MORE HP. Weight isnt his problem, even at a lofty 4200lbs, it is the drag that his car is creating at high speeds when it punches a big hole through the air.
If your concerned about the weight of your car........go drag racing. In ORR weight doesnt mean ****. The only thing weight will effect is response time on your suspension. BUT IF you took this into consideration PRIOR to building the car, its not even a concern.
The concerns you need to have for running at top speed is finding the perfect balance between drag and downforce. Then you throw the HP in the mix to get it up there.
In a reletively stock C5/Fbod, 6th gear is USELESS. As a matter of fact its not even recommended that you use 6th gear at all when you are trying to go REAL fast (over 165mph). The amont generated inside your trans (even with a cooler) is astronomical when trying to pull 6th gear at speeds over 165mph.
To be able to pull with a 2.73 rear gear you better have a TRAIN LOAD and I mean a fricken TRAIN LOAD of hp. I know guys in the ORR world make WELL in excess of 650rwhp and fight to pull 210+mph with a 3.08 rear gear.
Making a high speed pass with gearing as deep as 4.10 is just plain ignorant. You are risking serious engine and drive train failure by doing it. Not even mentioning the critical driveshaft speed will go WELL beyond what just about any driveshaft is capable of handling.
At what event did you do that?
AERODYNAMIC DRAG is the limiting factor when it comes to top speed. Actually its a combonation of HP and Aero drag. HP and speed are inverse square of each other. In laymans terms, it takes 4x's as much HP to go twice as fast. The load on the engine is created from the aerodynamic drag on the car. You can make changes to rear wings, air dams etc to increase your top speed but at the same time you are making the car less stable at those speeds by DECREASING THE AERODYNAMIC DRAG. You are NOT decreasing the weight of the vehicle. The NEGATIVE LIFT (see: DOWNFORCE) will cause increased PRESSURE on the car BUT THERE IS NO PHYSICAL WEIGHT CHANGE of the vehicle itself.
Take a given vehicle on a given chassis combo at say 3500lbs. Get it to TERMINAL VELOCITY, say for talking purposes 200mph . NOW, go and remove 1000lbs from the vehicle. The vehicle now weighs in at a scant 2500lbs. Now get it to 200mph.....The car will still NOT exceed 200mph without AERODYNAMIC changes to the car that DECREASE the amount of resistance and/or DRAG. The drag on the car will be the limiting factor NOT the weight of the vehicle.
Example: Todd Carpenters UNL. Class camaro. This car has seen sustained speeds of 215mph. When he went hunting for another 5mph he DID NOT start yanking weight out of the vehicle. He started by pulling the rearview mirros, taping body seems, removed his rear spoiler (which he almost regreted) and added MORE HP. Weight isnt his problem, even at a lofty 4200lbs, it is the drag that his car is creating at high speeds when it punches a big hole through the air.
If your concerned about the weight of your car........go drag racing. In ORR weight doesnt mean ****. The only thing weight will effect is response time on your suspension. BUT IF you took this into consideration PRIOR to building the car, its not even a concern.
The concerns you need to have for running at top speed is finding the perfect balance between drag and downforce. Then you throw the HP in the mix to get it up there.
In a reletively stock C5/Fbod, 6th gear is USELESS. As a matter of fact its not even recommended that you use 6th gear at all when you are trying to go REAL fast (over 165mph). The amont generated inside your trans (even with a cooler) is astronomical when trying to pull 6th gear at speeds over 165mph.
To be able to pull with a 2.73 rear gear you better have a TRAIN LOAD and I mean a fricken TRAIN LOAD of hp. I know guys in the ORR world make WELL in excess of 650rwhp and fight to pull 210+mph with a 3.08 rear gear.
Making a high speed pass with gearing as deep as 4.10 is just plain ignorant. You are risking serious engine and drive train failure by doing it. Not even mentioning the critical driveshaft speed will go WELL beyond what just about any driveshaft is capable of handling.
At what event did you do that?
Last edited by Team ZR1; Aug 17, 2004 at 04:44 PM.
Re: Engine Cuts at 120
Originally Posted by Team ZR1
Weight has ZERO to do with top speed, WOW,
you would be correct if you had unlimited distance to prove that but in all other cases you would lose.
you would be correct if you had unlimited distance to prove that but in all other cases you would lose.
If the engine had 400 HP and car weighted 3300 lbs that would equal 8.25 lbs per HP.
If the car weighted only 2300 lbs then that would be only 5.75 lbs each HP had to support.
If the car weighted only 2300 lbs then that would be only 5.75 lbs each HP had to support.
If I now added a rear wing and for each 1 degree of upward angle it was set to would equal another 100 POUNDS of weight onto the car, thus 5 degrees, 500 lbs, you add that to the rolling resistance and the lighter car will have the top end speed, not the heavy one.
Salt flats, the cara are heavy, but they also have tons more HP for the sole purpose is to use that weight to reduce lift and maintain traction.
If I took a Corvette that weighted 3300 and another exactly the same EXCEPT it weights 2300 lbs the following SIMULATOR results would happen in the real world and as can be seen the vette weighing 3300 lbs loses not only in elapsed time but also distance it took to get to the same speed and if a rear wing was used it would be worse.
If the distance, IE was salt flats was 3 miles the heavier car would not get to the top speed as lighter car did since it would take about another mile to get to the same speed, if the engine was able to with added wind resistance.
Vette on left is 2300 lbs and vette on right is 3300 lbs

If the distance, IE was salt flats was 3 miles the heavier car would not get to the top speed as lighter car did since it would take about another mile to get to the same speed, if the engine was able to with added wind resistance.
Vette on left is 2300 lbs and vette on right is 3300 lbs

As another example I custom tuned a airplane that had two props, the engine is a C5R with a turbo, it required at least 600 HP to stay in the air, the 1st tests and the plane was a bit shy in HP at the rotor tips and the only way they got it to work correctly was to reduce the weight to HP ratio.
As to ORRing we do not reduce the weight for nothing and I have done every ORR event in Nv and Tx, Silver state, PE100, Big Bend, Gamblers run, etc.
My GM/Mobil I Snakeskinner ZR-1 went from 3.600 lbs to 2,600 lbs and
thanks but I'll keep the weight off.
My GM/Mobil I Snakeskinner ZR-1 went from 3.600 lbs to 2,600 lbs and
thanks but I'll keep the weight off.
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