SPEEDSHAK":30vol109 said:
Oh yeah... Did I mention how Sargis did at Road America in 2010?
Steve Sargis' run at RA is a perfect example of what we are talking about. He carried a lot more weight than he did when he ran the same car in G, and guess what, he turned lap times that are only about a second or so off of what he turned with the G car. Why? Because weight doesn't stop a higher horsepower car from reaching its top speed provided the straight is long enough. Steve was probably a couple mph slower than the CRX on the straight, and if you remember he got passed at the start but was able to get back by because he was close to the top speed of the CRX. He was 3 or 4 mph faster than the fastest Spridget IIRC because he definitely has more power than a LP1275..
We are not talking about lap times here. Latest shocks, lighter wheels and the like have nothing to do with trap speeds. There is no way that a car can be 4, 5 or as much as 8 mph different on the straight and make that up on braking or cornering. Do the math and see what 5 mph does over the length of one straight, then look at how many times in one lap you get to use that advantage, then look at how many laps there are. Jason was able to stay with you because he turned identical trap speeds as you did. If there was some trick that would make a Spridget 4 or 5 mph faster, one of the 8 or so Spridgets would have found it by now, but with stock carbs on stock heads there is not anything to work with which is why we are so similar in trap speed. There has been significant dyno time spent on this configuration so if there was something out there it would be known by now.
Of course you think giving the LBC's more power is unfair. That would put us more on an even keel with the CRX. I know that you think you have developed the crap out of your car, and I am sure you have. But don't belittle the efforts of all of the other guys that have developed their cars. And speaking of development, many of the former G car tin tops were hardly developed at all before they were brought into H. That is why they have continued to be developed over the years and have offset the advantage that we used to have with better aero. There is probably still some things that can be done to them even though they are already turning similar lap times. Bigger motors make bigger power. Bigger power makes cars go faster on the straight. Going faster on the straight will win the race every time until enough weight is added to offset the straight line speed with diminished acceleration, cornering, and braking. As I said, that will take quite a bit of weight either added to the front cars, taken off the cars behind, or a combination of both because weight isn't the answer to top speed. For info, your and Jason's trap speeds were closer to Huffaker and Linn's F speeds then they were to the rest of the H field. Joe has probably 20 to 30 more horses and weighs less than the H Spridgets, and was 2 mph faster than you and Jason.
As for more weight hurting your tire management, I feel for you about as much as you feel for me being 5 mph slower than you on the straight. I don't begrudge you winning. You and Jason ran a good race (although that one bobble you had in turn 9 would have put you in the weeds in a RWD car) and you deserve to win. The cars that used to dominate the class also deserve a chance to win as well or at least run up front, and that won't happen with what we have now. Steve Hussey and his Bugeye would be at least 2 seconds off of his record on the track as it is now. With maybe one exception there are no 948's that can keep up with a LP1275. I should know - I had a fast one.
I don't know what the answer is. I am just outlining the problem. I am not ready for vintage, but I am willing to go away if nothing can be done.