LP64 to W140AX Conversion NO TROLL
#105
for $25,000 you can build a faster car...... u prolly could build a fastercar for less than that. u could take an old car and drop in a BBC. easy, simple, faster, less money, you can get more power. overal better
#107
#109
Joined: 12-30-07
Posts: 14,331
Likes: 197
From: NEPA
#110
A fully built motor, proper cooling and exhaust, with a 1.6L twin screw should net about 500 fwhp. A 100 shot to get to 600 fwhp is fesable then.
#111
That's not entirely true. If you have something can displace enough air, then you will. A stupidly large turbo, although not practical, could generate 600 fwhp on 28 PSI based on pure efficiency.
A fully built motor, proper cooling and exhaust, with a 1.6L twin screw should net about 500 fwhp. A 100 shot to get to 600 fwhp is fesable then.
A fully built motor, proper cooling and exhaust, with a 1.6L twin screw should net about 500 fwhp. A 100 shot to get to 600 fwhp is fesable then.
and i disagree with the 500whp twinscrew
#112
umm thats not true.. zzp did mid 500 if i remember on their 2.4 motor on like 19-20 psi or something like that .. and they were just getting started.. i'm sure they'd be damn close if they were at 26 psi .. considering the turbo they're using
#113
I do think its possible to jam 600 whp out of a stock block, granting the fact that it holds together. It just wouldn't be an efficient way to do it.
EDIT: Why is 500 hard to believe? Area had just about 400 whp on a TVS, stock displacement.
Assuming built motor, as I previously said, that means 2.4L, ported head, etc, it's doable. You're talking .3L more of blower and a hell of a lot more efficiency. I suppose I could do all of the calculations but its not worth the time for this argument.
Let's just leave it as agree to disagree.
#115
But he had said a built motor????
I do think its possible to jam 600 whp out of a stock block, granting the fact that it holds together. It just wouldn't be an efficient way to do it.
EDIT: Why is 500 hard to believe? Area had just about 400 whp on a TVS, stock displacement.
Assuming built motor, as I previously said, that means 2.4L, ported head, etc, it's doable. You're talking .3L more of blower and a hell of a lot more efficiency. I suppose I could do all of the calculations but its not worth the time for this argument.
Let's just leave it as agree to disagree.
I do think its possible to jam 600 whp out of a stock block, granting the fact that it holds together. It just wouldn't be an efficient way to do it.
EDIT: Why is 500 hard to believe? Area had just about 400 whp on a TVS, stock displacement.
Assuming built motor, as I previously said, that means 2.4L, ported head, etc, it's doable. You're talking .3L more of blower and a hell of a lot more efficiency. I suppose I could do all of the calculations but its not worth the time for this argument.
Let's just leave it as agree to disagree.
#120
Yup. All the power, all the heat, lack of cooling. That's worth it? Not mention jamming a heap ton of air flow thru a small vacuum bypass? That bypass was not meant to see air flow of those numbers.
Twincharging is the least efficient way to make power. Yes it does work, but its not as efficient as just one system or the other. Its more of a show car thing.
Twincharging is the least efficient way to make power. Yes it does work, but its not as efficient as just one system or the other. Its more of a show car thing.
#121
Yup. All the power, all the heat, lack of cooling. That's worth it? Not mention jamming a heap ton of air flow thru a small vacuum bypass? That bypass was not meant to see air flow of those numbers.
To Respond to your many posts:
Twincharging is the least efficient way to make power. Yes it does work, but its not as efficient as just one system or the other. Its more of a show car thing.
To Respond to your many posts:
Twincharging is the least efficient way to make power. Yes it does work, but its not as efficient as just one system or the other. Its more of a show car thing.
BBC will always lose to the more efficient handling car on track, I have seen very few people attempt to bring a car over 700hp into a non-formula or GT spec race. So no I will never corrupt my cobalt with a non-LSJ engine transplant.
28psi is all I need, yes there may be a need to use some bottle, but I am hoping to keep the type of bottle I'm using to track legal CO2, not NO2. If you know why that's important you'll realize where it's going. The NO2 factor is unreliable and testy at best in the corners I am hoping to run.
Probably still see both, but much less than your thinking.
The stock head won't work at all, whole things a great idea for a GTi contending stocker, but for the purposes of my build we'll see some extreme dollars go to work on a heavily improved system to support high RPM's and a verocious cam, and yea note here, my state doesn't test on the tail pipe, has Cat it's good to go.
The car will have the potential to flow all the fuel, air, and exhaust necessary to on paper deliver the power, the new Supercharger fills the displacement gap in at 2 barish, and with the other pieces of the equation I'll get the number out.
Ever seen Turbo/Supercharged Mustang's? Some key notes I would like to point out is somehow they're are mustangs making 100% gains on 9psi. WOW impossible Jimmy Johns! HOW DOES IT WORK? There are plenty of restrictions an engine faces when pumping air/exhaust, take them away and improve the speed it does it, and you see pretty results.
The supercharger is just an aid, it amplifies the potential of the engine, which I have total faith in. Transmission not so much...
Yes engine will be built, and it will be built with internals that will hopefully pay off up top, down low when I get the dyno it's ganna be pretty much the same, maybe slight lull or gain, but up top, doing what it's set to do, it'll be cake.
Don't think I'm stupid, the car sits quasi modified now, but this is the test phase, having done that all I need to setup the parts that will support the climb.
When it's done, if the tires and how she sits with a wicked set of brakes doesn't give away the biz of the build I'd be honest and say you probably never liked cars.
#122
Still doesn't stop the horde of people that heard from that guy, that friend, or my buddy says...
BBC will always lose to the more efficient handling car on track, I have seen very few people attempt to bring a car over 700hp into a non-formula or GT spec race. So no I will never corrupt my cobalt with a non-LSJ engine transplant.
28psi is all I need, yes there may be a need to use some bottle, but I am hoping to keep the type of bottle I'm using to track legal CO2, not NO2. If you know why that's important you'll realize where it's going. The NO2 factor is unreliable and testy at best in the corners I am hoping to run.
Probably still see both, but much less than your thinking.
The stock head won't work at all, whole things a great idea for a GTi contending stocker, but for the purposes of my build we'll see some extreme dollars go to work on a heavily improved system to support high RPM's and a verocious cam, and yea note here, my state doesn't test on the tail pipe, has Cat it's good to go.
The car will have the potential to flow all the fuel, air, and exhaust necessary to on paper deliver the power, the new Supercharger fills the displacement gap in at 2 barish, and with the other pieces of the equation I'll get the number out.
Ever seen Turbo/Supercharged Mustang's? Some key notes I would like to point out is somehow they're are mustangs making 100% gains on 9psi. WOW impossible Jimmy Johns! HOW DOES IT WORK? There are plenty of restrictions an engine faces when pumping air/exhaust, take them away and improve the speed it does it, and you see pretty results.
The supercharger is just an aid, it amplifies the potential of the engine, which I have total faith in. Transmission not so much...
Yes engine will be built, and it will be built with internals that will hopefully pay off up top, down low when I get the dyno it's ganna be pretty much the same, maybe slight lull or gain, but up top, doing what it's set to do, it'll be cake.
Don't think I'm stupid, the car sits quasi modified now, but this is the test phase, having done that all I need to setup the parts that will support the climb.
When it's done, if the tires and how she sits with a wicked set of brakes doesn't give away the biz of the build I'd be honest and say you probably never liked cars.
BBC will always lose to the more efficient handling car on track, I have seen very few people attempt to bring a car over 700hp into a non-formula or GT spec race. So no I will never corrupt my cobalt with a non-LSJ engine transplant.
28psi is all I need, yes there may be a need to use some bottle, but I am hoping to keep the type of bottle I'm using to track legal CO2, not NO2. If you know why that's important you'll realize where it's going. The NO2 factor is unreliable and testy at best in the corners I am hoping to run.
Probably still see both, but much less than your thinking.
The stock head won't work at all, whole things a great idea for a GTi contending stocker, but for the purposes of my build we'll see some extreme dollars go to work on a heavily improved system to support high RPM's and a verocious cam, and yea note here, my state doesn't test on the tail pipe, has Cat it's good to go.
The car will have the potential to flow all the fuel, air, and exhaust necessary to on paper deliver the power, the new Supercharger fills the displacement gap in at 2 barish, and with the other pieces of the equation I'll get the number out.
Ever seen Turbo/Supercharged Mustang's? Some key notes I would like to point out is somehow they're are mustangs making 100% gains on 9psi. WOW impossible Jimmy Johns! HOW DOES IT WORK? There are plenty of restrictions an engine faces when pumping air/exhaust, take them away and improve the speed it does it, and you see pretty results.
The supercharger is just an aid, it amplifies the potential of the engine, which I have total faith in. Transmission not so much...
Yes engine will be built, and it will be built with internals that will hopefully pay off up top, down low when I get the dyno it's ganna be pretty much the same, maybe slight lull or gain, but up top, doing what it's set to do, it'll be cake.
Don't think I'm stupid, the car sits quasi modified now, but this is the test phase, having done that all I need to setup the parts that will support the climb.
When it's done, if the tires and how she sits with a wicked set of brakes doesn't give away the biz of the build I'd be honest and say you probably never liked cars.
The long rod combined with a stroker crank should allow for awesome revving capability, which is what you need.
#123
I have considered the long rod, but the extra engine size is undeniably a big part of the numbers I'm looking at, if I get the specs from some friends on they're 240's builds I should have info that will answer how the engine will be prepared in concept.
@bogalusahondakiller
I have never been to the .com cobalt website if that's whay your suggesting...?
I've hit some snags with the car, so there will be some down time to address it. Meter Maid decided to hit me, and the clutch has since given it's last fully functional clutch (clutch?) so drivetrain upgrades will be coming up soon, the body is just scratched nothing major until you get to the details up close. I need a bodykit regardless to support wider tires legally, so that'll be addressed soon too.
Hopefully by July I will post the Baseline Dyno for where I started out with some garage (my home one not something special just yet) tuning when the new clutch arrives.
@bogalusahondakiller
I have never been to the .com cobalt website if that's whay your suggesting...?
I've hit some snags with the car, so there will be some down time to address it. Meter Maid decided to hit me, and the clutch has since given it's last fully functional clutch (clutch?) so drivetrain upgrades will be coming up soon, the body is just scratched nothing major until you get to the details up close. I need a bodykit regardless to support wider tires legally, so that'll be addressed soon too.
Hopefully by July I will post the Baseline Dyno for where I started out with some garage (my home one not something special just yet) tuning when the new clutch arrives.
#124
Yup. All the power, all the heat, lack of cooling. That's worth it? Not mention jamming a heap ton of air flow thru a small vacuum bypass? That bypass was not meant to see air flow of those numbers.
Twincharging is the least efficient way to make power. Yes it does work, but its not as efficient as just one system or the other. Its more of a show car thing.
Twincharging is the least efficient way to make power. Yes it does work, but its not as efficient as just one system or the other. Its more of a show car thing.
explain please
#125
Trust me, do a long rod if you are serious. Its worth every penny. Just ask those who have stroker motors with and without.