Turbo6Smackdown
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 31, 2005
- Messages
- 6,110
Dusty, Brian, Bison, and any other 10 second and faster guys chime in at any time.
Odd question. For those of you who spend most of your time on the track, vs. the street.. If you're on a well prepped track, and have your suspension dialed in, so that you car hooks great, and utilize a trans brake or line lock, does this tempt you guys to go for slightly less stall speed, knowing that you can build tons of boost on the line and launch hard, not needing those few rpms you shaved off, to build boost?
I was thinking, that if I needed for example, a 2800 stall for a good match between spooling and top end slippage, but could build a solid 10 psi on the line, with zero wheel spin upon take off, could I get away with a 2400 rpm stall, knowing that I already have a good amount of rpm's built up, and won't slip a bit when I let 'er go? Will that combination of high launch psi & a perfect hook make up for a tight converter?
I was thinking of this, as I'm still afraid of having zero traction in the street, when I flatten the accelerator. I'm going thru different scenarios in my mind every 5 seconds.. "Maybe I could use a tight converter to control wheel spin when accelerating, but if I need a good launch, I'll just build a lot of boost on the line next time"
How far off am I? I was hoping for the best of both worlds.
Odd question. For those of you who spend most of your time on the track, vs. the street.. If you're on a well prepped track, and have your suspension dialed in, so that you car hooks great, and utilize a trans brake or line lock, does this tempt you guys to go for slightly less stall speed, knowing that you can build tons of boost on the line and launch hard, not needing those few rpms you shaved off, to build boost?
I was thinking, that if I needed for example, a 2800 stall for a good match between spooling and top end slippage, but could build a solid 10 psi on the line, with zero wheel spin upon take off, could I get away with a 2400 rpm stall, knowing that I already have a good amount of rpm's built up, and won't slip a bit when I let 'er go? Will that combination of high launch psi & a perfect hook make up for a tight converter?
I was thinking of this, as I'm still afraid of having zero traction in the street, when I flatten the accelerator. I'm going thru different scenarios in my mind every 5 seconds.. "Maybe I could use a tight converter to control wheel spin when accelerating, but if I need a good launch, I'll just build a lot of boost on the line next time"
How far off am I? I was hoping for the best of both worlds.