Every one of them I've seen in recent years is a turbojet. J-85s seem to be the most popular.do any of the teams use low-bypass turbo fans? or does everyone still use turbo-jets?
I remember seeing the Mamba in the RCS shop next to your VHS in the early 70's. Indeed those little industrial spaces were dotted with magic and skills that built a culture. I'd pedal my bike all over the SF valley just to get a look at anything drag related.You maybe right. Could have been certain times of the year that he left the car here in So Cal. It was so long ago and I was so young that i don't remember all the details.
Bloodhound SSC locked up the last of the pledged funding it needed. full car test pass in June, record attempt in October. http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/news/bloodhound-supersonic-first-record-attempt-october-2017I'm wondering what's taking Bloodhound SSC so long to get going, funding? That car is supposed to go 1000mph, but it needs 12 miles of desert in South Africa to do it.
I also remember as a kid how much problem some of them seemed to have when staging and wanting to slide through the beams. I don't know what they did to fix it but you never see it these days with the more modern dragsters and funny cars.Arfon's Cyclops used a J79. Years ago I talked with the late Craig Arfons at OCIR at one of the big jet and rocket meets. He had a new, very light dragster .I forget what engine he said it had. He had a problem staging and launching it. He said when he put it in the beams and started to bring the revs up, it would just slide the car forward and red light.