How about we just let them run 99.9% and see who gets to the 4's first.
Give them the 500 Cubic Inches and clutch management that a TF car has and they'll be running 4.80s at 305 mph. before lunch......
Alan
How about we just let them run 99.9% and see who gets to the 4's first.
Give them the 500 Cubic Inches and clutch management that a TF car has and they'll be running 4.80s at 305 mph. before lunch......
Alan
Yes they did & IHRA allowed nitrous oxide as well. There were some NHRA A/FD that showed up, but without nitrous. My 2 cents: if you ran an injected nitro engine, say 900 CI, with 6 stages of nitrous, you still wouldn't be as quick as a T/F car today.Didn't the IHRA try this as "pro fuel?" From what I saw, they were no quicker than the A/Fuel cars in the NHRA.
I bet bumping nitro percentage back up to 100% and/or clutch management would be all it would take. Hard to believe it's been 13 years since Myers laid down a 5.10 on 100% and 10 years since Reichert did it on 97%. The way engine technology continually improves it wouldn't be hard to hit 4's with a couple of minor tweaks.However, as far as dipping into the 4's, the current A/Fuelers would only need a little bit of restrictions lifted.
One milestone was A/FD breaking 250 MPH. Ed Vickroy did it in a car normally driven by Don Enriquez & it had injector stacks on it. Gene Adams tuned it. Vickroy ended up going 254 MPH & a best of 5.77 ET. Don't remember the year, but Phil Burgess ran a comparison of this car with Don Garlits 1975 T/F car, the first to run 250.
thanks cliff.....ed vickroy run is what i was thinking about.....i was way off on the et.....will probably get scolded again for
not knowing the exact correct numbers
5.103 by Bill Reichert in Houston. I still remember listening to the run on the Audiocast and it was one of the few times an A-Fuel car left my jaw on the floor. It was quite muggy the day he ran that too, so conditions weren't exactly the best, which makes the run even more impressive. I also believe he was running under 99% pop.