But darned cold with nothing but a manifold heater...and the gasoline heaters would kill you with their fumes! I used to deliver pizza in a VW in the winter when I was in high school.Thats why the vw bug goes so good in the snow engine in the back and narrow tires the heat in them things were not the greatest but they were alot of fun. back in the day. right scotty?![]()
This is a complex issue. Take from a driver from Michigan that in general, the correct pressure in a tire is the best in snow/wet. A smaller contact patch may make for 10% higher pressure on the ground, but it is more often that the friction of the size of the contact patch is more important. For snow, it is actually the amount of tread area (edges) that can "bite" the snow. While it is true that too wide a tire will have poor traction in wet weather or snow, it is also true for too narrow a tire. Tread style, driving methods, weight over the drive wheels, and smooth application of torque are far more important than any small change in tire size, anyway, as is the use of radial tires rather than bias ply tires. Bottom line, use a tire that is sized for the vehicle, then pick a tire pressure and stay with it despite changing weather conditions. Just some practical advice from a northern boy.
I have been watching the USFRA website for info on Seth's speed attempts on the Salt Flats. This morning I see they have finally posted the results from Friday, but no pictures, yet. http://www.saltflats.com/130%20club09_18_09.htm
It looks like Seth got in 3 runs on Friday.
UTAH SALT FLATS RACING ASSOCIATION
130 CLUB 23rd WORLD OF SPEED
9/18/2009
CAR..............DRIVER................SPEED.........1/2 MILE........130 TRAP
T6772.....SETH OSBURNSEN........73.37118.....103.43059.....111.66352
T6772.....OSBURNSEN, SETH T....77.15482......103.2865......111.33147
T6772.....OSBURNSEN, SETH T....78.13516......103.11407....111.82303
They have not posted Saturday and they are still racing today - and it appears the weather is still holding.
I am looking forward to hear what Seth has to tell and I hope he got to do some runs on Saturday.
Check in soon Seth, and have a safe trip home.
Tom
Tom,
Can you interpret these results for me please. The only one I think I understand is that is how fast he was going at the half mile? Is that correct. So is the first mph for the 1/4 mile? What is 130 Trap? How do his scores compare with other vehicle scores? Thanks for any help.
There are photocells at various places along the course. This is a short course run. The 130 trap is at the measured mile. Not sure of USFRA procedures, and whether or not they have a running start before the measured mile. From the speeds at the first trap (1/4 mile?), it does not look like it. More like Maxton, with a standing start and speed measured at the mile marker, after a standing start at the beginning of the mile. Faster vehicles run a longer course, with a long run up, a long timed section, and a long shut down. I suspect Seth may be disappointed, but it is harder to get very high speeds at this 4,320 ft. altitude. I think 111 is very respectable.
There are photocells at various places along the course. This is a short course run. The 130 trap is at the measured mile. Not sure of USFRA procedures, and whether or not they have a running start before the measured mile. From the speeds at the first trap (1/4 mile?), it does not look like it. More like Maxton, with a standing start and speed measured at the mile marker, after a standing start at the beginning of the mile. Faster vehicles run a longer course, with a long run up, a long timed section, and a long shut down. I suspect Seth may be disappointed, but it is harder to get very high speeds at this 4,320 ft. altitude. I think 111 is very respectable.
The altitude at Bonneville is a big reason for slower speeds, especially on a stock vehicle. Normally, re-tuning can help correct some of this, but there are severe limits. Another (and often better) solution is supercharging. You only have so much air to work with at that altitude, so you can only shove so much fuel through the motor unless you add a supercharger. An additional solution is nitromethane fuels, which contain their own oxygen, so aren't as limited by the lack of available air to provide oxygen for combustion. Of course you can always supercharge plus run nitro...my favorite combination! Blown nitro motors rock!So the altitude is the main reason that a bike that will otherwise hit 130+ would only go 111 ?
Could some re-tuning take care of that?
The fastest I've had my Spyder was 130 according to the Spyder---- checked my GPS and it shows my fastest speed achieved at 124 --- which I knew would be more accurate than the Spyder reads.
The altitude at Bonneville is a big reason for slower speeds, especially on a stock vehicle. Normally, re-tuning can help correct some of this, but there are severe limits. Another (and often better) solution is supercharging. You only have so much air to work with at that altitude, so you can only shove so much fuel through the motor unless you add a supercharger. An additional solution is nitromethane fuels, which contain their own oxygen, so aren't as limited by the lack of available air to provide oxygen for combustion. Of course you can always supercharge plus run nitro...my favorite combination! Blown nitro motors rock!