Liberty CRD
#41
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Liberty CRD
Half a million miles would take something like ten thousand hours.
I usually drove about three hundred thousand miles before I did an
in-frame.
You're thinking of the longevity of a carburated Pro Stock engine,
or the 5,000 horsepower top fuel. But I would think the buyers of this
1600 horsepower crate motor would be very disappointed if it failed in
anything like "your" ten hours:
http://www.steveschmidtracing.com/ssr_095.htm The 800 horsepower Rat I
pointed you to is a "Street" engine, designed to cruise the boulevards.
I'm very happy with my one horsepower per cubic inch, 120 MPH, in the
twelve's: http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm What engine were you
thinking of in this two HP per cube?
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm
Steelgtr62 wrote:
>
> You are not figuring Power to Weight to Time. An 855 Cummins will run-judging
> by genset ratings-at 300 hp for somewhere between thirty to fifty thousand
> hours TBO.
>
> An 828 hp Chevy 'Rat' "motor" will run at this power setting for...I don't
> know but seriously doubt ten hours. Maybe not one. It will probably run at the
> aforementioned 300 hp for a thousand.
>
> When you start figuring the weight of the engine itself plus the fuel to run
> it any given number of horsepower-hours, the Chevy looks quite poor indeed.
> BSFC of a naturally aspirated two valve pushrod engine running at 2 hp/CID has
> to be unbelievably bad, for one thing the engine has to be running very rich to
> keep the exhaust valves from blowing out the ports as molten slag. Water
> methanol injection could help but figure the cost of methanol and (it had best
> be) DI or distilled water,to say nothing of weight and supply...
>
> As an aside this 828 hp out of 454 cid is not respectable at all as current F1
> engines are making more than that out of a third the displacement. On gasoline.
I usually drove about three hundred thousand miles before I did an
in-frame.
You're thinking of the longevity of a carburated Pro Stock engine,
or the 5,000 horsepower top fuel. But I would think the buyers of this
1600 horsepower crate motor would be very disappointed if it failed in
anything like "your" ten hours:
http://www.steveschmidtracing.com/ssr_095.htm The 800 horsepower Rat I
pointed you to is a "Street" engine, designed to cruise the boulevards.
I'm very happy with my one horsepower per cubic inch, 120 MPH, in the
twelve's: http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm What engine were you
thinking of in this two HP per cube?
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm
Steelgtr62 wrote:
>
> You are not figuring Power to Weight to Time. An 855 Cummins will run-judging
> by genset ratings-at 300 hp for somewhere between thirty to fifty thousand
> hours TBO.
>
> An 828 hp Chevy 'Rat' "motor" will run at this power setting for...I don't
> know but seriously doubt ten hours. Maybe not one. It will probably run at the
> aforementioned 300 hp for a thousand.
>
> When you start figuring the weight of the engine itself plus the fuel to run
> it any given number of horsepower-hours, the Chevy looks quite poor indeed.
> BSFC of a naturally aspirated two valve pushrod engine running at 2 hp/CID has
> to be unbelievably bad, for one thing the engine has to be running very rich to
> keep the exhaust valves from blowing out the ports as molten slag. Water
> methanol injection could help but figure the cost of methanol and (it had best
> be) DI or distilled water,to say nothing of weight and supply...
>
> As an aside this 828 hp out of 454 cid is not respectable at all as current F1
> engines are making more than that out of a third the displacement. On gasoline.
#42
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Liberty CRD
Half a million miles would take something like ten thousand hours.
I usually drove about three hundred thousand miles before I did an
in-frame.
You're thinking of the longevity of a carburated Pro Stock engine,
or the 5,000 horsepower top fuel. But I would think the buyers of this
1600 horsepower crate motor would be very disappointed if it failed in
anything like "your" ten hours:
http://www.steveschmidtracing.com/ssr_095.htm The 800 horsepower Rat I
pointed you to is a "Street" engine, designed to cruise the boulevards.
I'm very happy with my one horsepower per cubic inch, 120 MPH, in the
twelve's: http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm What engine were you
thinking of in this two HP per cube?
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm
Steelgtr62 wrote:
>
> You are not figuring Power to Weight to Time. An 855 Cummins will run-judging
> by genset ratings-at 300 hp for somewhere between thirty to fifty thousand
> hours TBO.
>
> An 828 hp Chevy 'Rat' "motor" will run at this power setting for...I don't
> know but seriously doubt ten hours. Maybe not one. It will probably run at the
> aforementioned 300 hp for a thousand.
>
> When you start figuring the weight of the engine itself plus the fuel to run
> it any given number of horsepower-hours, the Chevy looks quite poor indeed.
> BSFC of a naturally aspirated two valve pushrod engine running at 2 hp/CID has
> to be unbelievably bad, for one thing the engine has to be running very rich to
> keep the exhaust valves from blowing out the ports as molten slag. Water
> methanol injection could help but figure the cost of methanol and (it had best
> be) DI or distilled water,to say nothing of weight and supply...
>
> As an aside this 828 hp out of 454 cid is not respectable at all as current F1
> engines are making more than that out of a third the displacement. On gasoline.
I usually drove about three hundred thousand miles before I did an
in-frame.
You're thinking of the longevity of a carburated Pro Stock engine,
or the 5,000 horsepower top fuel. But I would think the buyers of this
1600 horsepower crate motor would be very disappointed if it failed in
anything like "your" ten hours:
http://www.steveschmidtracing.com/ssr_095.htm The 800 horsepower Rat I
pointed you to is a "Street" engine, designed to cruise the boulevards.
I'm very happy with my one horsepower per cubic inch, 120 MPH, in the
twelve's: http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm What engine were you
thinking of in this two HP per cube?
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm
Steelgtr62 wrote:
>
> You are not figuring Power to Weight to Time. An 855 Cummins will run-judging
> by genset ratings-at 300 hp for somewhere between thirty to fifty thousand
> hours TBO.
>
> An 828 hp Chevy 'Rat' "motor" will run at this power setting for...I don't
> know but seriously doubt ten hours. Maybe not one. It will probably run at the
> aforementioned 300 hp for a thousand.
>
> When you start figuring the weight of the engine itself plus the fuel to run
> it any given number of horsepower-hours, the Chevy looks quite poor indeed.
> BSFC of a naturally aspirated two valve pushrod engine running at 2 hp/CID has
> to be unbelievably bad, for one thing the engine has to be running very rich to
> keep the exhaust valves from blowing out the ports as molten slag. Water
> methanol injection could help but figure the cost of methanol and (it had best
> be) DI or distilled water,to say nothing of weight and supply...
>
> As an aside this 828 hp out of 454 cid is not respectable at all as current F1
> engines are making more than that out of a third the displacement. On gasoline.
#43
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Liberty CRD
Half a million miles would take something like ten thousand hours.
I usually drove about three hundred thousand miles before I did an
in-frame.
You're thinking of the longevity of a carburated Pro Stock engine,
or the 5,000 horsepower top fuel. But I would think the buyers of this
1600 horsepower crate motor would be very disappointed if it failed in
anything like "your" ten hours:
http://www.steveschmidtracing.com/ssr_095.htm The 800 horsepower Rat I
pointed you to is a "Street" engine, designed to cruise the boulevards.
I'm very happy with my one horsepower per cubic inch, 120 MPH, in the
twelve's: http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm What engine were you
thinking of in this two HP per cube?
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm
Steelgtr62 wrote:
>
> You are not figuring Power to Weight to Time. An 855 Cummins will run-judging
> by genset ratings-at 300 hp for somewhere between thirty to fifty thousand
> hours TBO.
>
> An 828 hp Chevy 'Rat' "motor" will run at this power setting for...I don't
> know but seriously doubt ten hours. Maybe not one. It will probably run at the
> aforementioned 300 hp for a thousand.
>
> When you start figuring the weight of the engine itself plus the fuel to run
> it any given number of horsepower-hours, the Chevy looks quite poor indeed.
> BSFC of a naturally aspirated two valve pushrod engine running at 2 hp/CID has
> to be unbelievably bad, for one thing the engine has to be running very rich to
> keep the exhaust valves from blowing out the ports as molten slag. Water
> methanol injection could help but figure the cost of methanol and (it had best
> be) DI or distilled water,to say nothing of weight and supply...
>
> As an aside this 828 hp out of 454 cid is not respectable at all as current F1
> engines are making more than that out of a third the displacement. On gasoline.
I usually drove about three hundred thousand miles before I did an
in-frame.
You're thinking of the longevity of a carburated Pro Stock engine,
or the 5,000 horsepower top fuel. But I would think the buyers of this
1600 horsepower crate motor would be very disappointed if it failed in
anything like "your" ten hours:
http://www.steveschmidtracing.com/ssr_095.htm The 800 horsepower Rat I
pointed you to is a "Street" engine, designed to cruise the boulevards.
I'm very happy with my one horsepower per cubic inch, 120 MPH, in the
twelve's: http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm What engine were you
thinking of in this two HP per cube?
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm
Steelgtr62 wrote:
>
> You are not figuring Power to Weight to Time. An 855 Cummins will run-judging
> by genset ratings-at 300 hp for somewhere between thirty to fifty thousand
> hours TBO.
>
> An 828 hp Chevy 'Rat' "motor" will run at this power setting for...I don't
> know but seriously doubt ten hours. Maybe not one. It will probably run at the
> aforementioned 300 hp for a thousand.
>
> When you start figuring the weight of the engine itself plus the fuel to run
> it any given number of horsepower-hours, the Chevy looks quite poor indeed.
> BSFC of a naturally aspirated two valve pushrod engine running at 2 hp/CID has
> to be unbelievably bad, for one thing the engine has to be running very rich to
> keep the exhaust valves from blowing out the ports as molten slag. Water
> methanol injection could help but figure the cost of methanol and (it had best
> be) DI or distilled water,to say nothing of weight and supply...
>
> As an aside this 828 hp out of 454 cid is not respectable at all as current F1
> engines are making more than that out of a third the displacement. On gasoline.
#44
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Liberty CRD
> Half a million miles would take something like ten thousand hours.
>I usually drove about three hundred thousand miles before I did an
>in-frame.
You are talking about a truck diesel then,"in-frame" implies liners et al.
American car engines generally don't have removable liners and almost always
need block machinework, unlike UK and Euro counterparts.
> You're thinking of the longevity of a carburated Pro Stock engine,
>or the 5,000 horsepower top fuel. But I would think the buyers of this
>1600 horsepower crate motor would be very disappointed if it failed in
>anything like "your" ten hours:
>http://www.steveschmidtracing.com/ssr_095.htm The 800 horsepower Rat I
>pointed you to is a "Street" engine, designed to cruise the boulevards.
>I'm very happy with my one horsepower per cubic inch, 120 MPH, in the
>twelve's: http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm What engine were you
>thinking of in this two HP per cube?
Do you cruise the boulevards of California at an average of 190 to 240 mph?
That's the only way you would be using anything remotely like 800 hp in a car
or light truck for more than several seconds at a time. Offshore racing boats
run big block Chevys wide open at 700-800 hp. An engine probably is good for
one race between 'freshenings' and in any event nothing but the block and heads
is even going to be considered for more than a few races. Often not even those.
TBO of a Top Fuel or Funny Car engine is five or six seconds. They change
pistons and rods between runs.
Put your monster big block up to a 500 kw three phase generator, geared to the
correct speed, and hook up a big gas tank. See how long it lasts at 800 hp, or
even 600.
>I usually drove about three hundred thousand miles before I did an
>in-frame.
You are talking about a truck diesel then,"in-frame" implies liners et al.
American car engines generally don't have removable liners and almost always
need block machinework, unlike UK and Euro counterparts.
> You're thinking of the longevity of a carburated Pro Stock engine,
>or the 5,000 horsepower top fuel. But I would think the buyers of this
>1600 horsepower crate motor would be very disappointed if it failed in
>anything like "your" ten hours:
>http://www.steveschmidtracing.com/ssr_095.htm The 800 horsepower Rat I
>pointed you to is a "Street" engine, designed to cruise the boulevards.
>I'm very happy with my one horsepower per cubic inch, 120 MPH, in the
>twelve's: http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm What engine were you
>thinking of in this two HP per cube?
Do you cruise the boulevards of California at an average of 190 to 240 mph?
That's the only way you would be using anything remotely like 800 hp in a car
or light truck for more than several seconds at a time. Offshore racing boats
run big block Chevys wide open at 700-800 hp. An engine probably is good for
one race between 'freshenings' and in any event nothing but the block and heads
is even going to be considered for more than a few races. Often not even those.
TBO of a Top Fuel or Funny Car engine is five or six seconds. They change
pistons and rods between runs.
Put your monster big block up to a 500 kw three phase generator, geared to the
correct speed, and hook up a big gas tank. See how long it lasts at 800 hp, or
even 600.
#45
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Liberty CRD
> Half a million miles would take something like ten thousand hours.
>I usually drove about three hundred thousand miles before I did an
>in-frame.
You are talking about a truck diesel then,"in-frame" implies liners et al.
American car engines generally don't have removable liners and almost always
need block machinework, unlike UK and Euro counterparts.
> You're thinking of the longevity of a carburated Pro Stock engine,
>or the 5,000 horsepower top fuel. But I would think the buyers of this
>1600 horsepower crate motor would be very disappointed if it failed in
>anything like "your" ten hours:
>http://www.steveschmidtracing.com/ssr_095.htm The 800 horsepower Rat I
>pointed you to is a "Street" engine, designed to cruise the boulevards.
>I'm very happy with my one horsepower per cubic inch, 120 MPH, in the
>twelve's: http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm What engine were you
>thinking of in this two HP per cube?
Do you cruise the boulevards of California at an average of 190 to 240 mph?
That's the only way you would be using anything remotely like 800 hp in a car
or light truck for more than several seconds at a time. Offshore racing boats
run big block Chevys wide open at 700-800 hp. An engine probably is good for
one race between 'freshenings' and in any event nothing but the block and heads
is even going to be considered for more than a few races. Often not even those.
TBO of a Top Fuel or Funny Car engine is five or six seconds. They change
pistons and rods between runs.
Put your monster big block up to a 500 kw three phase generator, geared to the
correct speed, and hook up a big gas tank. See how long it lasts at 800 hp, or
even 600.
>I usually drove about three hundred thousand miles before I did an
>in-frame.
You are talking about a truck diesel then,"in-frame" implies liners et al.
American car engines generally don't have removable liners and almost always
need block machinework, unlike UK and Euro counterparts.
> You're thinking of the longevity of a carburated Pro Stock engine,
>or the 5,000 horsepower top fuel. But I would think the buyers of this
>1600 horsepower crate motor would be very disappointed if it failed in
>anything like "your" ten hours:
>http://www.steveschmidtracing.com/ssr_095.htm The 800 horsepower Rat I
>pointed you to is a "Street" engine, designed to cruise the boulevards.
>I'm very happy with my one horsepower per cubic inch, 120 MPH, in the
>twelve's: http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm What engine were you
>thinking of in this two HP per cube?
Do you cruise the boulevards of California at an average of 190 to 240 mph?
That's the only way you would be using anything remotely like 800 hp in a car
or light truck for more than several seconds at a time. Offshore racing boats
run big block Chevys wide open at 700-800 hp. An engine probably is good for
one race between 'freshenings' and in any event nothing but the block and heads
is even going to be considered for more than a few races. Often not even those.
TBO of a Top Fuel or Funny Car engine is five or six seconds. They change
pistons and rods between runs.
Put your monster big block up to a 500 kw three phase generator, geared to the
correct speed, and hook up a big gas tank. See how long it lasts at 800 hp, or
even 600.
#46
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Liberty CRD
> Half a million miles would take something like ten thousand hours.
>I usually drove about three hundred thousand miles before I did an
>in-frame.
You are talking about a truck diesel then,"in-frame" implies liners et al.
American car engines generally don't have removable liners and almost always
need block machinework, unlike UK and Euro counterparts.
> You're thinking of the longevity of a carburated Pro Stock engine,
>or the 5,000 horsepower top fuel. But I would think the buyers of this
>1600 horsepower crate motor would be very disappointed if it failed in
>anything like "your" ten hours:
>http://www.steveschmidtracing.com/ssr_095.htm The 800 horsepower Rat I
>pointed you to is a "Street" engine, designed to cruise the boulevards.
>I'm very happy with my one horsepower per cubic inch, 120 MPH, in the
>twelve's: http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm What engine were you
>thinking of in this two HP per cube?
Do you cruise the boulevards of California at an average of 190 to 240 mph?
That's the only way you would be using anything remotely like 800 hp in a car
or light truck for more than several seconds at a time. Offshore racing boats
run big block Chevys wide open at 700-800 hp. An engine probably is good for
one race between 'freshenings' and in any event nothing but the block and heads
is even going to be considered for more than a few races. Often not even those.
TBO of a Top Fuel or Funny Car engine is five or six seconds. They change
pistons and rods between runs.
Put your monster big block up to a 500 kw three phase generator, geared to the
correct speed, and hook up a big gas tank. See how long it lasts at 800 hp, or
even 600.
>I usually drove about three hundred thousand miles before I did an
>in-frame.
You are talking about a truck diesel then,"in-frame" implies liners et al.
American car engines generally don't have removable liners and almost always
need block machinework, unlike UK and Euro counterparts.
> You're thinking of the longevity of a carburated Pro Stock engine,
>or the 5,000 horsepower top fuel. But I would think the buyers of this
>1600 horsepower crate motor would be very disappointed if it failed in
>anything like "your" ten hours:
>http://www.steveschmidtracing.com/ssr_095.htm The 800 horsepower Rat I
>pointed you to is a "Street" engine, designed to cruise the boulevards.
>I'm very happy with my one horsepower per cubic inch, 120 MPH, in the
>twelve's: http://www.----------.com/thunderb.htm What engine were you
>thinking of in this two HP per cube?
Do you cruise the boulevards of California at an average of 190 to 240 mph?
That's the only way you would be using anything remotely like 800 hp in a car
or light truck for more than several seconds at a time. Offshore racing boats
run big block Chevys wide open at 700-800 hp. An engine probably is good for
one race between 'freshenings' and in any event nothing but the block and heads
is even going to be considered for more than a few races. Often not even those.
TBO of a Top Fuel or Funny Car engine is five or six seconds. They change
pistons and rods between runs.
Put your monster big block up to a 500 kw three phase generator, geared to the
correct speed, and hook up a big gas tank. See how long it lasts at 800 hp, or
even 600.
#47
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Liberty CRD
You've never been in California on Friday nights, and watched them
lope though.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Steelgtr62 wrote:
>
> You are talking about a truck diesel then,"in-frame" implies liners et al.
> American car engines generally don't have removable liners and almost always
> need block machinework, unlike UK and Euro counterparts.
>
> Do you cruise the boulevards of California at an average of 190 to 240 mph?
> That's the only way you would be using anything remotely like 800 hp in a car
> or light truck for more than several seconds at a time. Offshore racing boats
> run big block Chevys wide open at 700-800 hp. An engine probably is good for
> one race between 'freshenings' and in any event nothing but the block and heads
> is even going to be considered for more than a few races. Often not even those.
>
> TBO of a Top Fuel or Funny Car engine is five or six seconds. They change
> pistons and rods between runs.
>
> Put your monster big block up to a 500 kw three phase generator, geared to the
> correct speed, and hook up a big gas tank. See how long it lasts at 800 hp, or
> even 600.
>
>
lope though.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Steelgtr62 wrote:
>
> You are talking about a truck diesel then,"in-frame" implies liners et al.
> American car engines generally don't have removable liners and almost always
> need block machinework, unlike UK and Euro counterparts.
>
> Do you cruise the boulevards of California at an average of 190 to 240 mph?
> That's the only way you would be using anything remotely like 800 hp in a car
> or light truck for more than several seconds at a time. Offshore racing boats
> run big block Chevys wide open at 700-800 hp. An engine probably is good for
> one race between 'freshenings' and in any event nothing but the block and heads
> is even going to be considered for more than a few races. Often not even those.
>
> TBO of a Top Fuel or Funny Car engine is five or six seconds. They change
> pistons and rods between runs.
>
> Put your monster big block up to a 500 kw three phase generator, geared to the
> correct speed, and hook up a big gas tank. See how long it lasts at 800 hp, or
> even 600.
>
>
#48
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Liberty CRD
You've never been in California on Friday nights, and watched them
lope though.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Steelgtr62 wrote:
>
> You are talking about a truck diesel then,"in-frame" implies liners et al.
> American car engines generally don't have removable liners and almost always
> need block machinework, unlike UK and Euro counterparts.
>
> Do you cruise the boulevards of California at an average of 190 to 240 mph?
> That's the only way you would be using anything remotely like 800 hp in a car
> or light truck for more than several seconds at a time. Offshore racing boats
> run big block Chevys wide open at 700-800 hp. An engine probably is good for
> one race between 'freshenings' and in any event nothing but the block and heads
> is even going to be considered for more than a few races. Often not even those.
>
> TBO of a Top Fuel or Funny Car engine is five or six seconds. They change
> pistons and rods between runs.
>
> Put your monster big block up to a 500 kw three phase generator, geared to the
> correct speed, and hook up a big gas tank. See how long it lasts at 800 hp, or
> even 600.
>
>
lope though.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Steelgtr62 wrote:
>
> You are talking about a truck diesel then,"in-frame" implies liners et al.
> American car engines generally don't have removable liners and almost always
> need block machinework, unlike UK and Euro counterparts.
>
> Do you cruise the boulevards of California at an average of 190 to 240 mph?
> That's the only way you would be using anything remotely like 800 hp in a car
> or light truck for more than several seconds at a time. Offshore racing boats
> run big block Chevys wide open at 700-800 hp. An engine probably is good for
> one race between 'freshenings' and in any event nothing but the block and heads
> is even going to be considered for more than a few races. Often not even those.
>
> TBO of a Top Fuel or Funny Car engine is five or six seconds. They change
> pistons and rods between runs.
>
> Put your monster big block up to a 500 kw three phase generator, geared to the
> correct speed, and hook up a big gas tank. See how long it lasts at 800 hp, or
> even 600.
>
>
#49
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Liberty CRD
You've never been in California on Friday nights, and watched them
lope though.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Steelgtr62 wrote:
>
> You are talking about a truck diesel then,"in-frame" implies liners et al.
> American car engines generally don't have removable liners and almost always
> need block machinework, unlike UK and Euro counterparts.
>
> Do you cruise the boulevards of California at an average of 190 to 240 mph?
> That's the only way you would be using anything remotely like 800 hp in a car
> or light truck for more than several seconds at a time. Offshore racing boats
> run big block Chevys wide open at 700-800 hp. An engine probably is good for
> one race between 'freshenings' and in any event nothing but the block and heads
> is even going to be considered for more than a few races. Often not even those.
>
> TBO of a Top Fuel or Funny Car engine is five or six seconds. They change
> pistons and rods between runs.
>
> Put your monster big block up to a 500 kw three phase generator, geared to the
> correct speed, and hook up a big gas tank. See how long it lasts at 800 hp, or
> even 600.
>
>
lope though.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Steelgtr62 wrote:
>
> You are talking about a truck diesel then,"in-frame" implies liners et al.
> American car engines generally don't have removable liners and almost always
> need block machinework, unlike UK and Euro counterparts.
>
> Do you cruise the boulevards of California at an average of 190 to 240 mph?
> That's the only way you would be using anything remotely like 800 hp in a car
> or light truck for more than several seconds at a time. Offshore racing boats
> run big block Chevys wide open at 700-800 hp. An engine probably is good for
> one race between 'freshenings' and in any event nothing but the block and heads
> is even going to be considered for more than a few races. Often not even those.
>
> TBO of a Top Fuel or Funny Car engine is five or six seconds. They change
> pistons and rods between runs.
>
> Put your monster big block up to a 500 kw three phase generator, geared to the
> correct speed, and hook up a big gas tank. See how long it lasts at 800 hp, or
> even 600.
>
>
#50
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Liberty CRD
"Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message news:<wtkcd.9937$xb.7885@text.news.blueyonder.co.u k>...
> The biggest modern diesel I could find is the VW Phaeton, which puts
> out 553 lb/ft torque from about 360 ci, or 1.536 lb/ft per ci in a
> production
> car. The hot rod motor puts out 1.281 lb/ft or 83% of the VWs efficiency.
Are you saying the Cummins Signature 600 isn't modern? Of course this
is not that big either, it might start the starter engine for a
Wartsila or Sulzer...
> The biggest modern diesel I could find is the VW Phaeton, which puts
> out 553 lb/ft torque from about 360 ci, or 1.536 lb/ft per ci in a
> production
> car. The hot rod motor puts out 1.281 lb/ft or 83% of the VWs efficiency.
Are you saying the Cummins Signature 600 isn't modern? Of course this
is not that big either, it might start the starter engine for a
Wartsila or Sulzer...