What is it running these days Don? Can't see the time.
John
The conditions of the launch that I used for this event made these two good runs I had even more amazing.
Since this was a pro light event (arm drop), I knew there wasn't going to be much opportunity to pre-spool the turbo or hit the nitrous before releasing the transbrake. Not the best way to launch a turbo car. My tight torque converter (2400 stall) made the prospect of a decent launch even more ridiculous.
All the delays were zeroed. I basically staged the car, went to WOT (2400 stall), and released the transbrake. The nitrous activated when the transbrake released. Absolutely no pre-spooling.
Let me make this clear. A destroked 224 Buick V6 running a 91mm/T6 turbocharger and a 2400 stall torque converter, leaving from the starting line from basically a dead stop!
This was the time slip from the video pass:
Him / Me
R/T .122 / .191
60' 1.435 / 1.690
330 4.088 / 4.412
1/8 6.336 / 6.451
MPH 109.01 / 121.26
1000 8.300 / 8.196
1/4 9.98 / 9.671
MPH 133.51 / 152.87
I have to say that I've done some drag racing sims on the car that suggested the car would mph at 155. But not with these kinds of incrementals. The best pass was the previous run to the videod pass. The mph on that run was 154.87 mph with a 1.666 60'. After readjusting the drag racing sim to mimic that particular pass, it showed that the hp required to pull that kind of a pass off, with the piss poor incrementals, required 1,130 peak bhp.

The car amazes me again. It never stops. This is with small valve (original valve sizes that came with the heads) M&A heads, that had very dismal flow numbers. Peak flow by .600 lift being only 210.

The cam profile and manifolding are doing something.
Oh! And the aux channel of the boost controller, which is setup to record manifold boost pressure, recorded a peak boost level of only 27.1 psi. The boost generally wandered between 26 to 27 psi. The pressure sensors I'm using for both channels on the boost controller (AMS1000) are the fancy ones. Not an OEM map sensor.