Moderator: The Mod Squad
2jayzgte wrote:End of the day in most cases the driver runs out of ability before the car does and for me throwing more power at it only will magnefy that fact.
Although the sales of true muscle cars were relatively modest
by total Detroit production standards, they had value in publicity.
Competition between manufacturers meant that buyers had the choice
of ever-more powerful engines. A horsepower war was started that
peaked in 1970, with some models advertising as much as 450 hp
(336 kW; 456 PS).
Muscle cars attracted young customers into showrooms, and they
bought the standard editions of these mid-size cars. To enhance the
"halo" effect of these models, the manufacturers modified some of
them into turn-key drag racers.
Grrrrrrr! wrote:I have no problem with electric motors.. but just dont mount them in the wheels. They are heavy, and heavy unsprung = shit. Heavy motors at the corners also means high yaw inertia. Mount inboard and use a driveshaft. A 60kw electric motor could get away with a tiny driveshaft, since there is no shock loading (clutch dumps etc) to deal with.
xsspeed wrote:
Except that (assuming it is direct drive) an electric motor has 100% of its torque at 0 rpm
GDII wrote:Of course an 80s designed engine isn't going to be very good compared to a new direct injection engine. It probably uses way less fuel to get that power. According to the guy at Crawford performance in the USA the new Subaru engine is way stronger and more efficient than the EJ20. The EJ20 is 21 years old.
Lloyd wrote:The EJ20s are hardly something you'd call reliable or economic by any stretch of the imagination.
Aren't the FAs running asymmetric conrods and things to get internals lighter while retaining strength, or is it for other reason?
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