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Old 07-07-2011, 10:17 PM   #11831
Shu71

 
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OP, Having driven (beaten) both about 4 months ago back to back, on the street (same road) with the stock tires on each, the Camaro was quicker but that really was a result of the narrower and not as sticky shoes on the Mustang. At the track where traction isn't nearly the limiting factor and we all have seen the numbers over and over again. I found the Camaro in the twisties held the road at higher mph, but again that has a lot to do with tires. If you replaced the stock stang tires then it would be the same battle like at the strip. They are both great modern muscle cars that handle closer to sport car status. You really can not go wrong with either and only you after driving them both can make that decision as unbiased as you deserve.

For those talking about gears and how they affect power I'd like to add something for all to read because so many times horsepower and torque and gears are misunderstood and that bad information keeps getting spread.

This is from http://www.nrhsperformance.com/tech_power.shtml and is written by Aaron Wilson who builds and rides land speed record motorcycles.


Quote:
Horsepower and Torque


Everyone wants more torque and more power, right? Well, the first step to getting there is to understand what the terms actually mean, and many, many people don't.

I've heard all kinds of crazy definitions:

"torque is what you feel, horsepower is just some obscure mathematical concept"

"torque is what accelerates the bike, horsepower is what maintains the speed"

"it's not how much torque you have that matters, it's how much total torque AND horsepower you have"

"Horsepower is a formula, not a physical sensation, where torque is a sensation!"

etc etc. Nice simple definitions that are easy to get your mind around for sure. Unfortunately, they also indicate a severe lack of understanding of what the terms actually mean. It's not difficult to understand torque and power and how they're related, but if you read and believe stuff like this, you'll make it harder than it has to be.

Forget about horsepower for a moment, let's define torque and the other ingredient of power, which is rpm.

Torque is just twisting force. One ft-lb of torque is literally defined as one pound of force applied at a one foot radius. Well, if torque is twisting force, and twisting force accelerates the bike, what else matters? Isn't torque the only goal?

Actually no, and the reason is that torque says nothing about how fast something is moving, only how much force is being applied. But how fast it's moving is enormously important. And, as it turns out, how much force you're able to apply and how fast something is moving are interrelated. It's easy to push hard if you don't have to push fast, and it's easy to push fast if you don't have to push hard.

To illustrate this, let's take an example. Say we have a handheld drill motor. It's turning 1000 rpm and it has 2 ft-lbs of torque. If we hook it up to a gear that has 10 teeth on it, and mesh that with another gear that has 10,000 teeth on it, what happens?

By doing this we've applied a factor of 1000 gear reduction. Rpm goes down with gear reduction, in this case it'll drop from 1000 rpm to 1 rpm. Likewise, torque goes up with gear reduction. In this case it'll go up from 2 ft-lbs to 2000 ft-lbs.

Wow, 2000 ft-lbs of torque from a handheld drill motor. We've really accomplished something, huh? We can move a mountain. But wait ... it's only turning 1 rpm! We have to time it with a calendar.

So what we've accomplished is that we've generated a LOT of torque, but unfortunately, we've given up a LOT of rpm. We're pushing very hard (torque) but also very slowly (rpm).

What happens if we turn the gearing around, and drive the 10 tooth gear with the 10,000 tooth gear? The small gear will turn at one million rpm! But it'll only have .002 ft-lbs of torque. Touch it with your finger and it'll stop. We're now pushing very fast (rpm), but also not pushing very hard (torque).

The basic relationship is that if we gear deeper, the torque goes up and the rpm goes down by equal factors. Likewise if we gear taller, the rpm goes up and the torque goes down by equal factors.

Understanding this basic relationship between torque and rpm and gearing is the key. Torque and rpm are interchangeable entities! All you have to do is change the gearing. Want big rpm? Gear it taller. Want big torque? Gear it shorter. Hell, we just showed how we can make 2000 ft-lbs with a handlheld drill motor, but for that matter, we could make a million ft-lbs with a drill motor. All it takes is gear reduction. Making big torque is no big trick if you don't care about speed.

So to everyone who thinks torque is a performance metric, well, put simply, torque is simply not a meaningful number for evaluating performance unless you also consider the rpm it's being made at. If the rpm didn't matter, we'd all just gear gear our bikes into the basement, and never take them out of first gear. We have FAR more torque at the rear wheel in first gear than any other gear. The torque and rpm being produced by our engine go through gear reduction in the primary, the transmission (except in 5th), and the final drive. The gear reduction through the transmission is deepest in first gear. You want torque? Just leave your bike in first gear all the time.

But nobody wants to ride around in first gear all the time. Sure, you've got lots of torque at the rear wheel in first, you can probably even pull a wheelie you've got so much torque. But you can't go very fast. Every time you upshift, you give up some rear wheel torque and trade it for some rear wheel rpm. By the time you get to 5th you may be able to go 100mph, but you don't have enough torque left at the rear wheel to pull a wheelie anymore.

Unfortunately, there's just no way to upshift and gain more rear wheel rpm without also losing rear wheel torque. So what we really want here, what really will help the performance of the bike, is to make more torque and more rpm at the same time. Well, as it turns out, there's a term for that: it's called "horsepower". Horsepower is literally torque times rpm (divided by 5252, but conceptually you can ignore that part, it's just to scale the number to what Watt's horse could do). The term "horsepower" describes the total combination of torque and rpm, without specifying it's makeup. But for the purposes of evaluating performance, it's makeup doesn't matter. If it's not made of the combination of torque and rpm that we want (and it's not), we just run it through some gearing. That's what gearing is for.

In the example above, the drill motor has .38 horsepower: (2 ft-lbs x 1000rpm) / 5252 = .38. After we geared it down to 1 rpm and 2000 ft-lbs, it still has .38 horsepower: (2000 ft-lbs x 1rpm) / 5252 = .38. The gearing didn't change the horsepower, it only changed the mixture of torque and rpm that makes up the horsepower.

Let's apply this to the real world in a simple example. Roy Ricer has a 600cc inline 4 that makes 40 ft-lbs at 15000rpm. He's up against Billy Biker with a Buell making 80 ft-lbs at 6000 rpm. Who's going to win?

Billy Biker has TWICE as much torque as Roy Ricer. But Roy Ricer's bike is turning two and a half times as many rpm. That means he can gear his bike two and a half times deeper than Billy Biker and still have the same rear wheel speed. Well, if he can gear his bike two and a half times deeper, that multiplies his torque two and a half times more. Two and a half times 40 is 100, and that's gonna put Billy Biker's 80ft-lbs on the trailer. At the rear wheel, which is where it matters, Roy Ricer will have 25% more torque than Billy Biker when geared for the same rear wheel speed.

The bikes I love and ride make their power with relatively high torque and low rpm. OHC multis on the other hand tend to make their power with relatively low torque and high rpm. I like the visceral feeling, the sound, the rumble, the ease of pulling away, etc, of a high torque, low rpm V-twin. But let's not kid ourselves. The fact that our power is made of high torque and low rpm doesn't somehow make it stronger than a bike with more power made of low torque and high rpm. The makeup of the motor's power isn't important for evaluating performance. What matters is more power.

One point of confusion, and I see it all the time, is when people look at torque on a dyno sheet and call it rear wheel torque. Seems to make sense, after all, the measurement was made at the rear wheel, it's rear wheel horsepower, must be rear wheel torque, right? I even see this mistake made by veteran motor guys as well as in magazine tech articles. Not unusual at all to see a glowing report of "100 ft-lbs at the rear wheel", for example.

Well, let me tell you, if someone really only has 100 ft-lbs at his rear wheel, get a stock Blast and you'll blow him into the weeds. Even in top gear the little Blast has 4.97 of gear reduction between the crank and the back wheel: 1.676 primary times 1.0 top gear times 2.963 final. With 30ft-lbs or so at the crank, that comes out to nearly 150ft-lbs at the back wheel. When you're in first gear, you've got 13.35 of gear reduction between the crank and the rear wheel giving you a whopping 400 ft-lbs!

The confusion lies in interpreting the dyno's numbers. It's not showing rear wheel torque, it's showing engine torque as measured at the rear wheel, and that's an important distinction. A Dynojet dyno won't even show torque unless you use the tach pickup, ever wonder why? It's because it needs to understand the gear reduction that lives between the drum and the crankshaft in order to calculate the torque at the crankshaft, which is what it displays. Notice how it plots torque against engine rpm, not rear wheel rpm, and the torque crosses the power at 5252 engine rpm, not rear wheel rpm. That's because it's engine torque, i.e. upstream of the gearing.

So now that we know what horsepower is, how do we make more of it? Make more torque and rpm at the same time, that's how! How do we get more torque and rpm from our engines? Well, the engine's torque is fundamentally cylinder pressure and the mechanical advantage it has on the crankshaft (bore and stroke both give it mechanical advantage). Cylinder pressure comes from filling the cylinder as completely as possible, squeezing it tight, and burning it completely. Rpm is how fast everything is happening. As rpm goes up and things happen faster and faster, there's less and less time to fill the cylinder. Hence the torque wants to drop. If torque is dropping faster than rpm is rising, stick a fork in it, it's done, because our total combination of torque and rpm is lower.

So what we do is concentrate on filling the cylinder at the rpm of interest. Many people want that cylinder fill at lower rpm so that their horsepower is made of relatively higher torque and lower rpm, we understand that. Cylinder fill is always the goal, we just change the rpm of interest. Reducing losses through the intake and exhaust tract, sizing the components for the mixture of flow and velocity that gives maximum fill, timing the cam events to match, and properly utilizing wave travel effects in the exhaust system are some of the ways we do this.
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Old 07-07-2011, 11:11 PM   #11832
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suspension work?
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Old 07-08-2011, 12:58 AM   #11833
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This is Chris Cruz's car and was put together with the help of Evolution Performance. It does not have aftermarket cams. When you click to play the vid, the mods are listed at the very beginning.
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Old 07-08-2011, 07:53 AM   #11834
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NicolasKL View Post
Actually, it is.

Blow By Racing ran 10.5 with a supercharger and exhaust.

Black03 at SVTPerformance.com ran 10.33 @ 133.68 with a supercharger, exhaust, cold air, driveshaft, MAF, and throttlebody. Sounds like a supercharger + bolt ons to me.
Now that is an impressive run for sure, but there are also a few supercharged Camaros in this forum running 10's with as well. The problem once again is there aren't that many folks in here pushing the envelope with the Camaro, like they do in the 5.0s. Also was this mustang gutted for weight reduction? Most of these tuner shop cars are, but they fail to mention that in their stories.
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Old 07-08-2011, 08:05 AM   #11835
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BigDan View Post
New left over 2011 GT500's are going for as low as $44-47k.

Sure a 5.0L with a blower on it is going to make more then the stock GT500 but the 5.0L is now stuck at my stock GT500's power level due to its non forged pistons and spent almost 10k to get there.

Now for the GT500 the fun has just begin because they can take 22psi of boost all day and it only takes $2,500 supercharger swap that you can do in you driveway in 2 hours and enjoy making 700whp+ and the rest of the drivetrain is stout enough to take vs the questionable GT trans.
That might be the most level headed reply I have ever read in the 5.0/GT-500 debate. Bravo! I happen to LOVE GT500's...and I am not a Ford guy by any stretch of the imagination.
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Old 07-08-2011, 08:27 AM   #11836
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Drove a Roush

I drove a new Roush at a local dealer It was the base model
Roush with just ginger bread items no Huffer or any performance
options It did however have axle back mufflers, a little
loud but pass noise requirements in 48 states I must admit it
sounded good.
Well the @$$ dino tells me it feels quicker than my SS/RS Man
I think the 3:73 gear helps in that regard ,the small wienies made it easier to light up.
Now on the strip it may be a diifferent story but the majority of us never
use the car that way.
You have to take into fact the 5.0 is 74 cubes less then SS
Compare running a 67 Camaro 350 against a 427 Camaro [77 cubes more]
I think the 427 would take it by a large margin.
The Stang may be lighter but advertises 14 less HP than Chevy
Not knocking the Camaro just stating an actual driving experience.
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Old 07-08-2011, 12:44 PM   #11837
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Quote:
Originally Posted by coolman View Post
That is very misleading. You got to remember it's a performance company trying to sell a product. That car is far from stock. They probably mean it has a stock bottom end ,but three passes don't mean it's reliable.
Rebecca Starkey in FL has been running low 10s/high 9s for months with a stock long block and transmission.

Sean Kelly in Norfolk went mid 9s with a stock long block and tranny but it did wind up spitting a rod.

i say mid 10s is reliable with these stock longblocks based on what ive seen so far.
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Old 07-08-2011, 01:04 PM   #11838
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Just for the hell of it I called my local Ford dealer to see what the very best price I could do on a 2012 Shelby GT500, this is a base model, no navigation or glass roof. but did have the SVTTuned Susp. It's Grabber blue with white stripes. Dealer has it on the lot with 55 miles on the car. His best price using all discounts avail. is $46,500, the best interest rate to be had is 2.25 % for 72 months. All in all not a bad deal but too steep of a monthly payment for me at this time. And when you consider that a fully loaded 2SS can run well over 40k GM needs to work on pricing. Anyways this gives you an idea of the actual sale prices out there. GM will have to price the new ZL1 in the 48-52K range to compete IMO.
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Last edited by newmoon; 07-08-2011 at 01:18 PM.
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Old 07-08-2011, 01:28 PM   #11839
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I drove both back to back. I thought the SS pulled harder from the lower RPMs and the Stang didn't start till the Higher RPMs. With my driving style I perfer the Camaro. Plus I had more leg room in the Camaro, my stinkin knees got all bunched up in the Stang. But other then that both of cars are really nice.
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Old 07-08-2011, 01:33 PM   #11840
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ParisTNDude View Post
Oh, no....did I read somewhere that the Camaro SS from Stevenson Motorsports beat the Rousch 302R GT at Road America this weekend. Oh, man, the Mustang guys are going to mess there pants when they hear that!!! The 302R GT has been their knight in shining armor and now the Camaro is beating them on road courses as well as the drag strip....YIKES!!
That is the only 1st place finish in GS in 3 seasons and, Grand Am applied further restrictions on the BMW's and Boss Mustangs as well as removing the Camaro's intake restriction completely (At Watkins Glen). There is absolutely no way the Camaros can keep up will the restrictions they had. This week is Laguna Seca, I imagine the Boss Mustangs will do very well...

As far as the strip.... money wins there...
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Old 07-08-2011, 01:45 PM   #11841
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NicolasKL View Post
I'd be pretty surprised if that price was on a car with the SVT Performance Package. Seems like a decent (but not great) price on a car with no options though. What dealer is it?

If that is right then someone should go snatch it up immediately, as that is a GREAT price.
I think the SVT package is an now called a Ford Performance Package which includes wheels, gears, and a few other upgrades. The car I inquired on did not have this package included. It has 19" wheels and 3:55 gears. Also I am not sure if the price could be reduced a bit more with a visit in person.
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Old 07-08-2011, 01:47 PM   #11842
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NicolasKL View Post
Actually, it is.

Blow By Racing ran 10.5 with a supercharger and exhaust.

Black03 at SVTPerformance.com ran 10.33 @ 133.68 with a supercharger, exhaust, cold air, driveshaft, MAF, and throttlebody. Sounds like a supercharger + bolt ons to me.


I said JUST JUST JUST JUST a supercharger. When he stated that the guy just added a supercharger, I stated he had to have more than just a couple bolt ons to get there...

The guy at SVTPerformance also has more than JUST a supercharger....(keep in mind when you say exhaust I'm assuming its a full headers/exhaust setup).

You WILL NOT slap a supercharger kit on a stock GT and run mid to low 10's without additional changes/mods. Anything that you add beyond the SC is supporting mods and thats what I said all along...


Quote:
Originally Posted by newmoon View Post
Now that is an impressive run for sure, but there are also a few supercharged Camaros in this forum running 10's with as well. The problem once again is there aren't that many folks in here pushing the envelope with the Camaro, like they do in the 5.0s. Also was this mustang gutted for weight reduction? Most of these tuner shop cars are, but they fail to mention that in their stories.
A lot of the Mustang's I've seen running low numbers are generally on DR's and in order to get any kind of legit passes (outside of a private rental) would have to be caged anyways... so I'm guessing they're probably messing with the weight. I also agree that a lot of shops fail to mention how much weight reduction has been made when dealing with ALL modified cars, Camaros included.
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Old 07-08-2011, 01:58 PM   #11843
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Spy video I seen of new GT500 had front mount intercooler but sounded supercharged. You could hear the whine
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Old 07-08-2011, 02:02 PM   #11844
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How bad was the car gutted to reduce weight?
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