Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Topics - Qikbbstang

Pages: 1 [2] 3 4 ... 17
16
Obviously a collection of shattered needle bearings in the bottom of the pan and it sounding like a real loose solid-cam is to late after the fact....................

17
FE Technical Forum / Harland Sharp R-Rockers question on recalled adjusters
« on: September 14, 2016, 04:26:30 PM »
I understand there were Harland sharp FE rocker "recalls" back some years ago that involved the adjusters.  I've got two sets of the common copper colored w/bronze bushings and steel-roller follower Harland Sharp's, both sets I've had stashed away for a long time.
   Can anyone provide a picture of the questionable adjusters vs the good adjusters ASAP?


18
Anyone ever had a problem turning their FE OFF?
=============================================================


Ford's road to victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 2016 was not paved with ease or perfection, but it all worked out in the end.

The Blue Oval's assault on the world's most famous motor race started with a pole position, produced the race's fastest lap, and earned a dominant result as the twin-turbo V6-powered GTs crossed the finish line first, third, and fourth.

From the outside, the winning No. 68 piloted by Joey Hand, Dirk Muller, and four-time Champ Car champion Sebastien Bourdais—a Le Mans native—appeared to be on cruise control throughout the grueling 24-hour contest. And while that was true for a large portion of the two-day contest, there was a stretch where Bourdais thought it might come crashing down thanks to a car-wide revolt by the GT's electronics.


It wasn't exactly a case of Skynet becoming self-aware, but as the Frenchman tells it, driving a Ford GT-gone-rogue made for what he calls "the stint from hell." Cut off from the team at night, unsure if he could trust the amount of fuel the GT says he has left to use before pitting, Bourdais began sweating bullets inside the cockpit.

"That triple stint was the most stressful I've ever had in my life," he told Road & Track. "By a long shot. We were obviously fighting for the lead, then all of a sudden the radio goes off. And it goes off for 40 minutes. I'm gone. I'm on my island. I have no idea if the fuel [tank accuracy] is good, wrong, bad, terrible; no idea. I'm going to have to pit on my own. The (team's handheld) signboard—I can't really see it. The reflection at night makes it hard to see it. So I was on my own deciding when I was going to have to pit."

With no information coming into the No. 68 at a critical juncture, Bourdais was presented with two different ways to lose the race, one way to stay on the right path, and the need to trust the fuel-remaining number on the digital dash mounted to the steering wheel. Running the car down to a point where it has enough to make it to the pits, but would not have enough to complete another lap, was the bullseye he had to hit.

"I tell you what, when you decide you've got one-and-a-half laps of fuel supposedly in the car, you want to pit because you don't want to run out of gas," he said. "In the meantime, you don't want to pit because it's too early and you know that—the number tells you it's too early. And you're like, 'I hope the fuel error is accurate, is not worse than it's supposed to be,' because if I run the car out of gas, I'm going to be the dumbest [...] ever. And you don't want to pit early either, because if you do that, that adds a stop to the end with a one-lap splash-and-go, and you lost the race on that. And that ain't any better. The stress at that moment was just though the roof."

Bourdais may have aced his first trial, but the No. 68 Ford wasn't done having fun at his expense.

"Then on the second stint, the radio comes back," he continued. "On the third stint, after the safety car period, all the electronics freezes in the car. I've got no dash, no display, no nothing. The only thing that works is the radio and the paddle-shift. So there is no pit speed limiter, and I can't stop the car, either. The kill switch on the steering wheel isn't working anymore. So, the [traction control] is just going bananas; whatever is happening is just making a mess of everything. That was the stint from hell."

Although he was now able to speak with the Ford Chip Ganassi Racing team, they were incapable of holding a GT exorcism while Bourdais was fending off the other cars vying for the win. After surviving the Ford's mid-race demonic possession, he was due to pit and hand over the car to co-driver Dirk Muller. More comedy was on the horizon, along with two more chances to earn penalties.

With a strict pit lane speed limit to stay below, and a rule requiring engines to be turned off during refueling, Bourdais attempted to comply with both rules and had a 50 percent success rate.

"I came into the pits with no speed limiter, watching the Aston Martin pitting behind me trying to gauge my speed so I'm not speeding on pit lane," he said. "Obviously, when I get to [our] pits, because I'm doing this, my [seat] belts aren't undone, Dirk is trying to yank me out of the car, and the car is still on because I'm still trying to find a way to shut it off but the master switch doesn't work ... It was tough, that's all I can say. Man, it ain't so easy sometimes."
During the stop, the Ganassi team replaced the gizmo-laden steering wheel with a spare, which cured the electronics failures. Bourdais did a perfect job of avoiding a speeding infraction, but with his inability to cut the engine during the stop, the No. 68 was given a drive-through penalty for refueling with the motor running.

That one miscue did cost the No. 68 some time, but Bourdais, Muller, and Hand rallied back to give Ford the win on the 50th anniversary of its first Le Mans triumph in 1966. For the Frenchman's sake, one can only hope that faulty steering wheel was burned at the stake and buried behind the garage.

http://www.roadandtrack.com/motorsports/a29714/sebastien-bourdais-ford-gt-le-mans-winner-2016/

20
a pipe is one set of headers (800x2) making it 1,600 lbs thrust on the car vs 800 lbs thrust x8cyl= 6,400 lbs thrust on the car?

Quote: "With some 800lbs of thrust per pipe being unleashed as the car is powering down the track"...... Really guys the thought of a fuel motor's exhaust thrust being capable of lifting eight (8) fully dressed FE motors off the ground is some very impressive thrust!.................

http://bangshift.com/bangshift1320/the-nhra-has-made-a-ruling-on-funny-car-headers-heres-why-you-look-dumb-if-you-freak-out/

It has been announced that NHRA officials have put a cap on the angle that nitro funny car teams can lean their header pipes back. Lots of people are freaking out about this and we think it is because the situation has not exactly been clearly laid out. Here’s the deal.

It was last year when Jimmy Prock and the Infinite Hero funny car crew started making modifications to their headers along with other aspects of the car and making massive strides in funny car performance. All of a sudden records were being blown to pieces week after week and it did not take other teams long to figure out what at least one of the changes was. With some 800lbs of thrust per pipe being unleashed as the car is powering down the track, laying the headers back to take advantage of the thrust the engine produces really made a difference. So in the true spirit of drag racing, if a little is good, more must be better.

From that point forward the headers have been leaning more and more to the point where physically there really isn’t anywhere left to go. See, when the headers get leaned back they also have to be moved in towards the body. This has resulted in a fun new trend in funny car which is the header burn replacement decal. Teams now stock cutouts of their wraps that can cover the spots where said wraps are being burned off the body. It is a new cost of doing business.

THE NHRA DID NOT STAND THE HEADERS BACK UP. What they did was tell teams that they cannot go further back from where they are. This is actually the best possible scenario in this case because there WERE TEAMS LOBBYING to get the headers put back to where they were before. Drivers, real funny car drivers, like Ron Capps were furious at the thought of this. The cars have become exponentially more difficult to drive and he’s loving it. He along with all of the other guys and girls who truly enjoy the challenge of wrestling these cars down the track at 300mph. Not everyone does. Funny cars are no longer the “slot cars” that they were for many years.

When cars lose a hole with the headers in their current state, they become a real handful. You have and will continue to see the results of this in the coming days, weeks, months, etc. Tough stuff.

Now, what about the old angle headers? Believe it or not, most teams are now stocking multiple sets of angle headers in their trailer and will use different headers for different track/race conditions. Yes, the headers themselves are now another tuning element of the cars. Is the track awesome and the air good? Bolt on the rocket boosters, grandma we’re going for ice cream! Is the track a 140-degree grease pit with swap ass air? You need the help the more vertical pipes give you to push the car into the ground.

So….before you go mental and freak out that the big, bad NHRA has once again sucked the soul out of drag racing and wrecked everything, understand that they did not. Even the guys who have been laying these things way, way back are happy about this decision. One prominent crew chief told me point blank in Chicago, “They have to do something because we’ll keep going until they tell us to stop.”

Well boys, stop. The 32-degree angle is as far as the rules makers are going to allow the pipes to go back.



21
..................it seems to never cease, pedaling the "SHELBY" reputation to the unwary for the $$$:

  No question the hottest Mustang made by FORD today is the GT350 and GT350R's. {these roll right off the Ford Production lines = not a bolt-on tuner shop named SHELBY}
    These sport the bad-ass 8,000rpm flat plane crank, make 526 hp/429 lb-ft  Obviously as with any ultra high performance Ford (Raptor's,, FORD GTs and SHELBY GT350's ) . On  SHELBY GT350's virtually everything on the car is special: magnetic suspension, cross-drilled brake system, Michelin superstick tires etc.. Currently new GT350s sell for about $60,000.

    So here we have HERTZ climbing under the covers with SHELBY and renting ($399/day) a SHELBY GT350H....This is in fact nothing more than a common Mustang GT V8 (435HP 425Tq)  about $33,000. that "SHELBY" puts a K&N and 30lb lighter cat-back exhaust on - very simply a cosmetic's package.    Care to bet on the numbers of Hertz GT350H renters that believe with all the mumbo-jumbo hype that they are renting a bad-ass GT350 like they've seen in the media and dreamed about?....................



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8JLhWAClAYY

22
It's a new one on me to do car advertisements with game videos.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QF3HJuFOaso

23
Non-FE Discussion Forum / FORD GT's 1-2 at WATKINS GLEN
« on: July 03, 2016, 09:21:02 PM »
OK I'm wondering are the FORD GTs that just ran at the Glen the same cars (not simply #s on other cars) that ran at LeMans, Daytona and Sebring?... Understandably endurance racing wears components out but it sure would be interesting if and what things can hold up to being run for multiple races.

http://www.motorsport.com/imsa/news/ford-gts-finish-1-2-at-watkins-glen-795415/


http://autoweek.com/article/imsa/le-mans-winning-ford-gt-will-race-watkins-glen

24
Non-FE Discussion Forum / Pro Stock motor from Engine Labs
« on: June 26, 2016, 10:45:31 PM »
The pistons shown are admittedly a three year old design and the article itself is over a year but they are amazing as is the technology within:


http://www.enginelabs.com/engine-tech/pro-stock-engines-whats-the-secret-to-those-big-power-numbers/

25
You can bet somewhere that material's sitting in bulk on a shelf perhaps in a roll or boxes or it's utilized in a fan or toy.  I know it's Mopar and it's not been $old but......
The Ford Muscle Parts Catalog price pages have the BO$$ 429 trunk-mount battery cap$ for something like $0.75


http://www.ebay.com/itm/1969-road-runner-GTX-Air-Grabber-Right-NOS-Screen-2949198-NEW-MoPar-/371464021696?fits=Model%3ARoadrunner&hash=item567cfb26c0:g:144AAOSwo6lWHmzr&vxp=mtr&rmvSB=true

26
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4jk51rgfts

Roadkill brings back a Mazda pickup powered by a 455 Oldsmobile in the bed! In Episode 45, Mike Finnegan and David Freiburger bought a lemon-colored Mazda REPU mini-truck with a 455 Olds big-block mounted in the bed, powering the rear wheels through a Toronado transaxle. The seller said it did wheelies and ran 10s in the quarter-mile. Not surprisingly, the guys quickly realized the lemon wouldn't run 10s even if it had unicorn blood in the engine. In this episode of Roadkill, the guys pull out all the stops to push the Mazdarati into 10-second territory by doing a top-end rebuild in the staging lanes of a dragstrip, road-tripping on HOT ROD's Drag Weekend event, and then making one heroic pass with the nitrous button pushed!

Would the way they started with a Naturally Aspirated and finished with a Power Adder even been allowed at DRAG WEEK?.............
Those Tornado/Eldorado Trans-Axles look to be tough..GM even built a bunch of good-sized motor homes with them..zillions of them must have been junked.


27
Strange it seemed to me like the author avoided mentioning Barrett Jackson like the plague......
 Then he discusses the importance of thorough documentation, provenance etc... but then the engine bay pictured of the "1964 Shelby 289 Cobra offered by Rm Sotheby's in Monterey" shows polished metal and blue-silicone radiator hoses, a hideous K&N filter, braided SS lines with red/blue anodized cplg's etc..... does that stuff scream Kit-Car to anyone?...
   Regardless the number$ and percentages are interesting

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-06-02/how-to-consign-a-million-dollar-vintage-car-from-garage-to-gavel

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-06-02/how-to-consign-a-million-dollar-vintage-car-from-garage-to-gavel#media-7


28
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-06-16/ford-s-crown-jewel-the-f-150-has-a-big-problem-after-overhaul


Ford is scrambling because about 40 percent of its new aluminum-body F-150s don’t comply with the 2016 mandates, according to Duleep. The four-wheel-drive, 3.5-liter SuperCab –- a high-volume variation -- falls 1 mile per gallon short and emits 15 grams of CO2 per mile more than allowed, he said.

29
     This headline greeted me this morning on my Yahoo home page            To me this authors "lesson" in tasteful Modification demonstrates how subtle two-tone paint, the reinforced stock-height front splitter/ rear spoiler, custom scoop and hood louvres do not work. Pointing out how well FoMoCo engineers did on the stock MACH 1 scheme.

There's always the car sales where the seller claims how much money was "invested" in the car (in this case $175,000) this is one of those sales.




https://www.yahoo.com/news/69-ford-mustang-lesson-tasteful-modification-130047587.html

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Ford-Mustang-/172220446714?forcerrptr=true&hash=item28192377fa:g:LSUAAOSw1DtXF-G2&item=172220446714

30
FE Technical Forum / FE Alum Blocks
« on: June 09, 2016, 09:00:25 AM »
I believe the SHELBY blocks are fairly radical as far as retaining the "original" configuration and other aftermarket FE alum blocks (when available) closely resemble a production block.   Are the Pond, BBM etc alum blocks essentially alum copies of production blocks with sleeves?

Pages: 1 [2] 3 4 ... 17