Originally posted by dj10@Jan 27 2006, 10:39 AM
AB, where are you getting crank hp numbers? Are you taking published factory hp numbers and adding a percent to them? That is theroetical not factual. I have no way of knowing how much crank hp I have, therefore I wouldn't write to anyone. I can only tell or show you my rwhp and what kind of dyno I used like I did when I sent you my dyno sheets last year. Right? So why not go the NASA way and require everyone to have signed dyno sheets? We know Dave so I will getting mine from Raetech. I would like to see published Crank Dyno numbers, you know where they are?
dj
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DJ,
The entire process is based on crank hp numbers - and assumptions. To date, the estimations and assumptions have been extreamly successful. In some cases, we have dyno sheets that prove or disprove certain assumptions.
Take the 12A RX-7 for example. 101 hp stock IIRC. Guess what? This is an ITC car all the way! But we KNOW, based on dyno info, that these cars can make over 150 crank hp. How? We use a commonly accepted 18% drivetrain loss and work backward from 125whp - a well documented - and sometimes conservative number. That is a 50% increase over stock.
Same issue with the hot CRX in ITA. 108hp stock IIRC, and 125whp on a dyno in legal, top-of-the-line form. Using a fwd correction factor of 15%, you can get the crank numbers pretty close.
Not exactly, but as close as you can.
Now the BMW does not use any secret formula. It's the same for everyone else. 189 * 1.25 = 236. This number is supported, almost to the hp, by a dyno sheet sent in by a BMW owner who was disputing the 225whp numbers being thrown around - using the same process and assumptions detailed above.
You may not agree with the way we are doing it, but understand that we do it for everyone - the same way. We do it to determine mon weights for new cars and we do it to determine new weights for reclassifications.
So the net/net? ITS has a target power to weight in IT-prep of 12.9:1. Our data shows that AT LEAST 240 crank hp is possible. That is too much for ITS, and in unrestricted form, has had an impact on the class, both in reality and in perception.
You can either run the weight you are supposed to to fit, or get an SIR. The other cars in the class are already at the weight they should be to fit, or they would hev been adjusted. ALL USING THE SAME METHODS.
The ONLY issue on the table is if the SIR is sized properly. That is something the CRB is VERY confident of given experience and research.
AB