Burnoutz
Back to the FWIW dept. [Again]
We did alot of testing some time ago for MT.
Here's what we learned while working w/ Jerry Francis of M/T:
1. Tires should be heated to approx. 10-15* hotter than the track surface. [Good use for the infrared gun!!] NO need for a long, smoky burnout.. just uses up the tires and does nothing for the performance.
2. NO dry hops! A burnout is designed to get the oils in the rubber to the surface of the tires so they are sticky. If you do a dry hop, then the part of the tires that were "hopped" are then void of the oils and sticky rubber. Watch the pros do a burnout.. no dry hops.. Cept for the bikes.
3. When doing a burnout, USE a line-loc!! Back into the water, set the loc and start the tires to spinning. Shift to 2'nd gear.. no need for a "bazzilion" RPM here. Watch for smoke. I always count 1000-1, 1000-2, 1000-3 and let go of the line loc. The car will begin to move forward, and as it does, I start backing out of the throttle. [No point in stretching the rods a half inch!!] Back to low gear, on the brakes to start some boost, stage first so I got some seconds to get some more boost up and let it rip!! [Tranny brakes are a HOOT!!]
4. Run the MAX air PSI you can.[Makes the car as stable as possible down track] Watch the tire wear patterns after a run to see if the scuffing is 100% across the tire face. If the scuff is in the middle only, then the PSI is too hi. If the outer is heavier than the center, then the PSI is too low. The scuff should be the same density, or real close across the entire surface.
5. Wheel width has alot to do w/ the performance too. The most common match is that up to a 10" tire, the rim can be 2" narrower. After 10" width, the rim should be as close to the tire width as possible.
Wheels that are too far "off", will make the contact patch incorrect. Ever see a 12" tire on an 8" rim???
Back to spinnin' the tires!!
HAPPY MUTHA"S DAY!! All you Mutha's!!!
