Does make you wonder what the NASCAR boys were up to or did they miss it also.Walter R. Malik wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 1:39 pm I never decked this block.
It was a previously built "restricted" NASCAR CUP engine block which I got honed to get the bores right and yes, it is my responsibility to not presume the decks would be correct.
I screwed up, it is over.
I am glad to read that you have NEVER made a mistake in you life which cost you.
Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
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Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
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Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
For me it would be around 160 water and 200 oil but in a competition like this they may choose a different setting but one that would deter people from running the engine at a detonation limit that would harm the engine. Just a thought.Warp Speed wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 4:37 pmHow do you define "full operating temps"?
When you guys dyno a NASCAR engine do you run them below their on track temp?
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Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
Would it be possible to have knock sensors test within boundaries of what an endurance engine could tolerate e.g. any detonation spikes would have to be within tolerance an engine could live with for a long time. A street/strip engine could even be put through a street driving simulation - same for all to eliminate the dyno queens which will not tolerate loaded pulls from lower rpms. Or am I being too simplistic?Walter R. Malik wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 1:21 pmI will answer that.
IF it is an unlimited compression rule ... if 120 some octane fuel is not supplied then it becomes merely which engine can withstand the most detonation.
A "Detonation Resistance" competition is not a very good contest.
Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
If it was ran in a class that only required them to pull 1 head during inspection I have a good idea which side they would choose.Dave Koehler wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 4:50 pmDoes make you wonder what the NASCAR boys were up to or did they miss it also.Walter R. Malik wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 1:39 pm I never decked this block.
It was a previously built "restricted" NASCAR CUP engine block which I got honed to get the bores right and yes, it is my responsibility to not presume the decks would be correct.
I screwed up, it is over.
I am glad to read that you have NEVER made a mistake in you life which cost you.
Please Note!
THE ABOVE POST IN NO WAY REFLECTS THE VIEWS OF SPEED TALK OR IT'S MEMBERS AND SHOULD BE VIEWED AS ENTERTAINMENT ONLY...Thanks, The Management!
THE ABOVE POST IN NO WAY REFLECTS THE VIEWS OF SPEED TALK OR IT'S MEMBERS AND SHOULD BE VIEWED AS ENTERTAINMENT ONLY...Thanks, The Management!
Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
less rules is why this competition is better in my opinion. It gives builders the leeway to experiment and not be held back.GARY C wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 4:57 pmFor me it would be around 160 water and 200 oil but in a competition like this they may choose a different setting but one that would deter people from running the engine at a detonation limit that would harm the engine. Just a thought.
When you guys dyno a NASCAR engine do you run them below their on track temp?
To get my temp up as quick as possible I told the dyno operator to put a load on it at 3k when it was first fired.
The issue you could have with minimum oil temp is that some engines just can't do that..and would require a thermostatically controlled oil system on the dyno with a heat exchanger ..to prevent contaminated oil getting into someone else's engine if an engine blew up.
Lots of extra crap to do and work out..I think it's best with less of that . Here's what you got, work with it.
In the EMC one year you were given 5 minutes to get your engine up to 160. The big inch engines reached that minimum no problem.
Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
Yes what I am presenting may not even be doable in a competition like this and the less rules idea I think falls into Randy331's idea of a spec fuel and let the builder choose what compression he feels he can do with that fuel.gmrocket wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 5:47 pmless rules is why this competition is better in my opinion. It gives builders the leeway to experiment and not be held back.GARY C wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 4:57 pmFor me it would be around 160 water and 200 oil but in a competition like this they may choose a different setting but one that would deter people from running the engine at a detonation limit that would harm the engine. Just a thought.
When you guys dyno a NASCAR engine do you run them below their on track temp?
To get my temp up as quick as possible I told the dyno operator to put a load on it at 3k when it was first fired.
The issue you could have with minimum oil temp is that some engines just can't do that..and would require a thermostatically controlled oil system on the dyno with a heat exchanger ..to prevent contaminated oil getting into someone else's engine if an engine blew up.
Lots of extra crap to do and work out..I think it's best with less of that . Here's what you got, work with it.
In the EMC one year you were given 5 minutes to get your engine up to 160. The big inch engines reached that minimum no problem.
I think a limited set of rules opens up innovation to the market place but if that innovation only works on a cold engine on a dyno then is it really useful for what you guys do on a daily bases?
Just thinking out loud.
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Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
These engines were not cold ... the dyno thermostat was set at 150 and most of my pulls were at about 155 water out and 180 oil. The air temp in the cell and outside was in the 80's.GARY C wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 6:29 pmYes what I am presenting may not even be doable in a competition like this and the less rules idea I think falls into Randy331's idea of a spec fuel and let the builder choose what compression he feels he can do with that fuel.gmrocket wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 5:47 pmless rules is why this competition is better in my opinion. It gives builders the leeway to experiment and not be held back.GARY C wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 4:57 pm
For me it would be around 160 water and 200 oil but in a competition like this they may choose a different setting but one that would deter people from running the engine at a detonation limit that would harm the engine. Just a thought.
When you guys dyno a NASCAR engine do you run them below their on track temp?
To get my temp up as quick as possible I told the dyno operator to put a load on it at 3k when it was first fired.
The issue you could have with minimum oil temp is that some engines just can't do that..and would require a thermostatically controlled oil system on the dyno with a heat exchanger ..to prevent contaminated oil getting into someone else's engine if an engine blew up.
Lots of extra crap to do and work out..I think it's best with less of that . Here's what you got, work with it.
In the EMC one year you were given 5 minutes to get your engine up to 160. The big inch engines reached that minimum no problem.
I think a limited set of rules opens up innovation to the market place but if that innovation only works on a cold engine on a dyno then is it really useful for what you guys do on a daily bases?
Just thinking out loud.
In testing ... running it a bit hotter or colder made little difference although some engines probably would.
The fuel at the contest, ( VP MS109 ), was high enough in octane and low enough in RVP to handle it easily.
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Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
Cool, I didn't know what temps you guys run at, it's hard to tell from the videos looking at the dyno console. Yes the MS 109 is a good fuel.Walter R. Malik wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 6:55 pmThese engines were not cold ... the dyno thermostat was set at 150 and most of my pulls were at about 155 water out and 180 oil. The air temp in the cell and outside was in the 80's.GARY C wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 6:29 pmYes what I am presenting may not even be doable in a competition like this and the less rules idea I think falls into Randy331's idea of a spec fuel and let the builder choose what compression he feels he can do with that fuel.gmrocket wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 5:47 pm
less rules is why this competition is better in my opinion. It gives builders the leeway to experiment and not be held back.
To get my temp up as quick as possible I told the dyno operator to put a load on it at 3k when it was first fired.
The issue you could have with minimum oil temp is that some engines just can't do that..and would require a thermostatically controlled oil system on the dyno with a heat exchanger ..to prevent contaminated oil getting into someone else's engine if an engine blew up.
Lots of extra crap to do and work out..I think it's best with less of that . Here's what you got, work with it.
In the EMC one year you were given 5 minutes to get your engine up to 160. The big inch engines reached that minimum no problem.
I think a limited set of rules opens up innovation to the market place but if that innovation only works on a cold engine on a dyno then is it really useful for what you guys do on a daily bases?
Just thinking out loud.
In testing ... running it a bit hotter or colder made little difference although some engines probably would.
The fuel at the contest, ( VP MS109 ), was high enough in octane and low enough in RVP to handle it easily.
Please Note!
THE ABOVE POST IN NO WAY REFLECTS THE VIEWS OF SPEED TALK OR IT'S MEMBERS AND SHOULD BE VIEWED AS ENTERTAINMENT ONLY...Thanks, The Management!
THE ABOVE POST IN NO WAY REFLECTS THE VIEWS OF SPEED TALK OR IT'S MEMBERS AND SHOULD BE VIEWED AS ENTERTAINMENT ONLY...Thanks, The Management!
Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
Eliminate the dyno queens ?Bazman wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 4:58 pm
Would it be possible to have knock sensors test within boundaries of what an endurance engine could tolerate e.g. any detonation spikes would have to be within tolerance an engine could live with for a long time. A street/strip engine could even be put through a street driving simulation - same for all to eliminate the dyno queens which will not tolerate loaded pulls from lower rpms. Or am I being too simplistic?
Isn't it a dyno contest ?
Do you really think the engines at EMC or REC are on the verge of failure ?
One of our engines we tested with went right in a dirt track car.
You don't win a dyno contest if the engine fails.
Spec fuel and no compression limit. Detonation costs power. Your not gonna make best power with the engine rattling.
Set a minimum temp if you want, but let that temp and what the spec fuel is be well known early.
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Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
One engine at the REC was in a car 5 days before the event according to the owner, and I believe, going right back into the car.
Real life engine that put down an impressive score on the dyno. If that is a dyno queen, then bring more of them!
Real life engine that put down an impressive score on the dyno. If that is a dyno queen, then bring more of them!
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Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
My 406 that finished 6th ended up in a full size truck that he drove to town 30 miles away and raced it at the track. My 540 from emc ended up in my camaro and ran 5.70s in the 1/8th. The 496 from emc ended up in another camaro that went mid 9s. Not dyno queens.
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Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
Dyno queens??? Just people who have never been there, spouting off. Consider the source.WeingartnerRacing wrote: ↑Sat Oct 13, 2018 10:32 am My 406 that finished 6th ended up in a full size truck that he drove to town 30 miles away and raced it at the track. My 540 from emc ended up in my camaro and ran 5.70s in the 1/8th. The 496 from emc ended up in another camaro that went mid 9s. Not dyno queens.
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Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
Question to those who believe all EMC/REC engines are dyno queens and on the edge of failure.
What could you do that would gain score (average power) but put the engine right at xxx dyno pulls from failure?
What could you do that you'd know, I got 12 pulls left, then BOOM ???,.... and that change was worth score ?
I mean I'm sure I could do something to an engine that would insure failure, but how do you know how much time it had left ??
Randy
What could you do that would gain score (average power) but put the engine right at xxx dyno pulls from failure?
What could you do that you'd know, I got 12 pulls left, then BOOM ???,.... and that change was worth score ?
I mean I'm sure I could do something to an engine that would insure failure, but how do you know how much time it had left ??
Randy
Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
I think this idea came from the publications back in the day talking about narrowed bearings and detonation issues.randy331 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 13, 2018 11:35 am Question to those who believe all EMC/REC engines are dyno queens and on the edge of failure.
What could you do that would gain score (average power) but put the engine right at xxx dyno pulls from failure?
What could you do that you'd know, I got 12 pulls left, then BOOM ???,.... and that change was worth score ?
I mean I'm sure I could do something to an engine that would insure failure, but how do you know how much time it had left ??
Randy
Even if you were allowed to reduce weight, narrow bearings run on the outer limits of detonation or what ever and the engine would only last 15 pulls it is still built for the competition it was intended for.
It would be no different then NASCAR or Pro Stock trying to optimize an engine that would live just long enough to win the race... BTW I think all top level engine start life on the dyno if I am not mistaken.
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Re: Winner Of The Race Engine Challenge
Detonation=bad for power and score
Out of control valvetrain= also bad for power and score
Piston rings, bearings, etc with extremely accurate dyno pull activated fuses that initiate destruction= unicorn $hit
Also...im out^2(off to break more records) but possibly could be right back
FACT^
And MOO
Out of control valvetrain= also bad for power and score
Piston rings, bearings, etc with extremely accurate dyno pull activated fuses that initiate destruction= unicorn $hit
Also...im out^2(off to break more records) but possibly could be right back
FACT^
And MOO
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