Tom Welch
Enthusiast
Hello,
While I'm not going to try and make up the classes for future events, I am going to voice my thoughts and suggestions concerning this new and exciting series, in an effort to insure its continued growth and success.
This may be hard for some to read but, I feel that some power adders do better on the dragstrip than others. With the recent controversy about nitrous cars and supercharged cars running at the V-10 nationals, Id like to suggest that we look at seperating these modifications into different classes. Don't get me wrong, I LOVE WINNING, and in my heart, I feel that I won the recent event as an UNDERDOG in power as there are several Mod 2 classified cars that are making well over 800 HP with high tech supercharger and turbocharger modifications.
With that said, Vipers with heads/cam and one power adder combinations should be seperated by power adder (nos,s/c, turbocharger)as the nitrous cars seem to do better on the track. Typically a nitrous car makes less power on the dyno than its forced air counterpart and BTR cars are a prime example of this as my personal best dyno pull is 776 RWHP(which is far less than some new forced air applications available). I know of at least two other heads/cam/nitrous Vipers that run 9 second times, but I feel that the s/c technology is not there yet and the nitrous cars seem to have an advantage.
I could turn up my nose at this fact and use the thought process of I don't care and run what you brung....but that will surely leave certain classes of racing one sided which gets boring after a while and is not conducive to growing a racing series.
Your thoughts are welcome. I hope that these middle of the road modification classes can get sorted out as the bulk of racers seem to fall in this category.
I would be more than happy to spearhead an effort to set up class schedules in an effort to get this series started correctly. There is alot of work to be done, and this brief text hasn't touched on some of the other complex classes like unlimited where stroker motors, aftermarket drivetrains and gearing, multipule power adders and more are the norm.
Tom
While I'm not going to try and make up the classes for future events, I am going to voice my thoughts and suggestions concerning this new and exciting series, in an effort to insure its continued growth and success.
This may be hard for some to read but, I feel that some power adders do better on the dragstrip than others. With the recent controversy about nitrous cars and supercharged cars running at the V-10 nationals, Id like to suggest that we look at seperating these modifications into different classes. Don't get me wrong, I LOVE WINNING, and in my heart, I feel that I won the recent event as an UNDERDOG in power as there are several Mod 2 classified cars that are making well over 800 HP with high tech supercharger and turbocharger modifications.
With that said, Vipers with heads/cam and one power adder combinations should be seperated by power adder (nos,s/c, turbocharger)as the nitrous cars seem to do better on the track. Typically a nitrous car makes less power on the dyno than its forced air counterpart and BTR cars are a prime example of this as my personal best dyno pull is 776 RWHP(which is far less than some new forced air applications available). I know of at least two other heads/cam/nitrous Vipers that run 9 second times, but I feel that the s/c technology is not there yet and the nitrous cars seem to have an advantage.
I could turn up my nose at this fact and use the thought process of I don't care and run what you brung....but that will surely leave certain classes of racing one sided which gets boring after a while and is not conducive to growing a racing series.
Your thoughts are welcome. I hope that these middle of the road modification classes can get sorted out as the bulk of racers seem to fall in this category.
I would be more than happy to spearhead an effort to set up class schedules in an effort to get this series started correctly. There is alot of work to be done, and this brief text hasn't touched on some of the other complex classes like unlimited where stroker motors, aftermarket drivetrains and gearing, multipule power adders and more are the norm.
Tom