01-04-2011 | #41 | |
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: O'Fallon, Mo
Posts: 738
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Re: Interesting DOHC vs. pushrod 500+ motors
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The slowest sports car I had in my stable was my 465 hp lingenfelter zr-1, until I gave it to my 17 year old son. Yet because you feel any discussion that refers to hp/l is only introduced by a "ricer". If you are hanging around with kids that own civics with 5" fart cans on them, and want to throw every import car in with them, so be it. I wouldn't however expect to post that and not expect a response. Not because I take it personally, but simply because it is wrong. |
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01-04-2011 | #42 |
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Chicagoland,IL
Posts: 2,679
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Re: Interesting DOHC vs. pushrod 500+ motors
Boy Boys.
It's not ricers that compare HP/L. It's the whole world but the USA. Just like metric and standard i think we're the only country using standard. I would've had a smaller tool box if we had one measurement. I think the reason we don't use HP/Lis we don't care about HP/L we stuff the biggest motor/cam in our cars,if it feels good on our butt dyno that's all that matters,at least that's all that matters to me Pete
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'91 #1635 PoloGreen 350 LT5 11.09 @ 129.27 11.04 @ 128.86 474RWHP 400RWTQ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SFNFOhGGlR4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZlRIOMwaDYY https://sites.google.com/site/peteszr1garage |
01-05-2011 | #43 | |
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: pittsburgh
Posts: 4,632
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Re: Interesting DOHC vs. pushrod 500+ motors
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It's not the car, it's the people - Doug Johnson 90 r/r "KEYS ON" nick named "T.L.B" |
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01-05-2011 | #44 |
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Squires (near Ava MO in the Mark Twain N'tl Forest) - Missouri
Posts: 6,493
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Re: Interesting DOHC vs. pushrod 500+ motors
Well, actually I was the one alluding to hp/l as a metric US manufactures are going to be forced to look at pretty soon as mpg requirements get tighter and tighter. All out racing is "whatever works", but mpg and passing emissions standards is not a concern. So, when one does start looking at hp/l and passing emissions (a la production cars) it generally isn't the OHV motors you see making the big numbers.
I'm just saying hp/l is going to be a factor in the not so distant future and I happen to believe that it was a mistake for GM to (apparently) shelve the DOHC V8 development in favor of displacement for NA motors - albeit a shining example of modern OHV engineering. The LSx = "Oaken buckets"... I fear, whose days are perhaps numbered - at least where the future of Corvette is concerned. I promise ya, I won't likely be getting in line to buy a FI pushrod V6 in the C7 Vette, if that is what they have in mind! Gotta run. P.
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Good carz, good food, good friendz = the best of timez! 90 #1202 "FBI" top end ported & relieved Cam timing by "Pete the Greek" Sans secondaries Chip & dyno tuning by Haibeck Automotive SW headers, X-pipe, MF muffs Former Secretary, ZR-1 Net Registry |
01-05-2011 | #45 |
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Leesburg, VA
Posts: 2,713
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Re: Interesting DOHC vs. pushrod 500+ motors
Wow... You really can't seem to not take offence, or tout how fast your cars are.
F1 cars make a lot of horsepower. Their engines are pretty interesting. That said, they are only small because they are required to be. If F1 had open engine specs, I doubt very many teams would build a 2.8L V8 that revved to 18,000 RPM. It's not because they value hp/liter that F1 cars are the way they are. They value horsepower, and there is a cap on displacement. In fact, you can look back in time to CanAm. When companies like Ferrari would run their small F1 engines, they'd get it handed to them. To win, you wanted the most power, not the most power/displacement. Pete, much of the rest of the world cares because historically they have been taxed on displacement. So if you want decent horsepower, and don't want to pay thousands in taxes when you buy your car, you want something with high power/displacement. Now that most of the EU taxes cars based on carbon dioxide emissions, I wonder if you will see engines get slowly larger? Your Audi makes 587hp. That's a lot, whether it's from 4.2L, 5.2L, or 20L of engine. As long as it fits under the hood and has the driveability you want, who gives a crap what its hp/liter is? I think Paul's oaken bucket thing is far afield from reality. The fact that an LSx has lower hp/liter than the LT5 means little, in my opinion. It doesn't make the LT5 "better" just because it makes more hp/liter than an LS motor. And it doesn't take more effort to drive a pushrod motor vs OHC, like it takes to get water from a bucket vs plumbing. That said, the LT5 is pretty great. With not a lot of work, they can put down 400-440whp from a stock bottom end, and still drive and idle like a stocker. What's not to like about that? Edit: To be less contentious, can you explain to me the value of hp/liter? If all of your cars made exactly the same power as they do now, drove the same, got the same economy, and the engines were the same physical size, but they were all exactly one liter larger in displacement. What exactly would be the effect? What would be different? How would a change to nothing other than the hp/liter number change your car?
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Bob Saveland Former owner of #2517 [IMG]http://a.random-image.net/aurora40/vette.jpg[/img] Last edited by Aurora40; 01-05-2011 at 09:29 AM. |
01-05-2011 | #46 | |
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: O'Fallon, Mo
Posts: 738
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Re: Interesting DOHC vs. pushrod 500+ motors
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You mistake a counter point for taking things personally. You people, like I to you, strangers somewhere behind a keyboard posting messages. I don't support you, sleep with you, eat dinner with you, or share living quarters with you, so why would I take anything you have to say personally? If I didn't think the lt-5 was a great power plant, why would I be here? If I didn't believe it had potential, why would I choose to put it into a different platform? The part I will always dispute is putting labels on people, I simply do not agree with it. Car people are car people, and they drive what they can afford, and generally do what they can. Anyone who puts time, and energy into what they own are generally proud. Just because someone else does not agree with how they spent their money they feel they can throw a label on them, I guess so they can feel better about what they own *shrug*. To your question about hp/l, if an engine is one liter larger, physically the same size, and made the same power it means it is less efficient. I cannot speak for everyone who is a "gear head", but I am all about maximizing the full potential of a powerplant, and wringing every bit of hp out of it I can afford to, without making it unreliable. To me it is a lot like investments. If you could invest 100k to get a yearly return of 5k, or 50k to get the same yearly return, which would you choose? If you have a wife, would you rather have one that weighs 110 lbs, or 300 lbs? Make two identical parts, but one process requires 100lbs of material, and the other 50 lbs to achieve the same result. Efficiency is as important as the end product, imho. If you are not concerned with it, I am ok with it, why are you not ok with the path I choose? |
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01-05-2011 | #47 | |
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: O'Fallon, Mo
Posts: 738
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Re: Interesting DOHC vs. pushrod 500+ motors
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01-05-2011 | #48 | |
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Squires (near Ava MO in the Mark Twain N'tl Forest) - Missouri
Posts: 6,493
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Re: Interesting DOHC vs. pushrod 500+ motors
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As far as oaken buckets go, I'm simply saying manufactures (GM) have to be careful not to become enamored with a particular technolgy and become over-committed. Is GM over-committed to the LS "solution"? I think they are. But, that's just IMO. Looking back at 50+ years of evolution of the Corvette, NOT ALL of it has been wonderful at times, and they again are stubbornly sticking with their current solution while others are going different routes. Time and future requirements will tell. But, I'm betting DOHC will win out if future Corvettes (GM) survives. But...who knows. P.
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Good carz, good food, good friendz = the best of timez! 90 #1202 "FBI" top end ported & relieved Cam timing by "Pete the Greek" Sans secondaries Chip & dyno tuning by Haibeck Automotive SW headers, X-pipe, MF muffs Former Secretary, ZR-1 Net Registry |
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01-05-2011 | #49 |
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Squires (near Ava MO in the Mark Twain N'tl Forest) - Missouri
Posts: 6,493
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Re: Interesting DOHC vs. pushrod 500+ motors
OK y'all...We're just having a discussion - separating the truth from fiction is what I wuz hopin for..K?
Well, just to toss another potato into the stew, when it comes down to it, PEAK torque or hp is what sells cars, but the real truth is "the area under the curve". My expertise (if I have any) is in electronics. And, when referring to the actual power contained in a voltage waveform, the dipstick commonly used to quantify it is "RMS" (Root-Mean (of the voltage readings havining been) Squared). I don't know if there is the equivelant in mechanical engineering, but perhaps one of you legit MEs can shed some light on the "power under the curve" question. Just another tool for a closer look at characteristics of the different designs. Any takers?? I'd really like to be able to quantify power under the curve in the correct manner, if possible. Curiosity is a daaaaanerous thing!! P.
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Good carz, good food, good friendz = the best of timez! 90 #1202 "FBI" top end ported & relieved Cam timing by "Pete the Greek" Sans secondaries Chip & dyno tuning by Haibeck Automotive SW headers, X-pipe, MF muffs Former Secretary, ZR-1 Net Registry |
01-05-2011 | #50 |
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Squires (near Ava MO in the Mark Twain N'tl Forest) - Missouri
Posts: 6,493
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Re: Interesting DOHC vs. pushrod 500+ motors
Well, assuming they both had the same "output" (a BIG IF), that would depend on which one was the higher maintenance, I recon!
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Good carz, good food, good friendz = the best of timez! 90 #1202 "FBI" top end ported & relieved Cam timing by "Pete the Greek" Sans secondaries Chip & dyno tuning by Haibeck Automotive SW headers, X-pipe, MF muffs Former Secretary, ZR-1 Net Registry |
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