padam
Well-Known Member
I won street class at Magnolia today.
Feels pretty damn good, 2 years of work finally paid off.
Feels pretty damn good, 2 years of work finally paid off.
Cool beans!! Rowing the gears making it sound like an automatic? Loved to hear people asking years back before the OD transmissions were common 'where did you get that 4 speed auto'?!I won street class at Magnolia today.
Feels pretty damn good, 2 years of work finally paid off.
View attachment 1322113
4 speeds may scare the average guy, but anyone that can row them seamlessly is not your average guy. A lost art form.I won street class at Magnolia today.
Feels pretty damn good, 2 years of work finally paid off.
View attachment 1322113
Nice video.
I am 100% "SAVE the STICK" for manual transmissions, regardless of how it may affect my drag strip times.
I have invested in the best systems and parts that I know of to make my current "warmed over" 440 6bbl get up and go, but moreso for the 572 that's in the works. If the Passon 5 speed breaks, I'll look at Jericho or G-Force, or maybe another manual transmission that is built for the power I will have.
My HitMaster launch control should be a big plus for performance and help reduce or hopefully prevent parts breaking.
For me, there is NO substitute for what I enjoy doing.
Congratulations!!
The video is poor, but once I got a rev limiter, I started power shifting, keeping the 6bbl open being a big reason for keeping the gas pedal matted, and saw about a 3/10ths improvement in my 1/4 mile times. My buddy commented that "I'm starting to actually shift my car"
and here's a Hemi Cuda 4 speed, that should be an incentive for both of us!
Manual transmission MONSTER
I always used the clutch too but never let off gas. That stayed matted from start to finish. If you miss a shift, there's room for improvement either with you or the equipment. Are you running a good clutch and shifter? You can lift off the gas between shifts but if things are right, you can do it fast enough to where it still sounds very close to an automatic. You can also add a stop to the clutch pedal to keep you from going past disengagement too much......I use the clutch to shift, and lift the gas slightly for a few reasons.
1. I've seen pictures of teeth ripped off cluster gears, and I think that keeping the gas down must put more stress there.
2. Up until last year I never had a rev limiter, and was afraid of blowing the engine on a missed shift.
3. The car will run pretty consistent shifting like I do. I've done it this way so long I don't have to think about it. If the mechanisms are in good order and adjustment, I rarely miss a shift.
I think I could run quicker power shifting, but I think bracket racers are won or lost 90% on the starting line, so I'm trying to focus on improving that.
I have done it before, just not confident enough to do it flat out and in a race.I always used the clutch too but never let off gas. That stayed matted from start to finish. If you miss a shift, there's room for improvement either with you or the equipment. Are you running a good clutch and shifter? You can lift off the gas between shifts but if things are right, you can do it fast enough to where it still sounds very close to an automatic. You can also add a stop to the clutch pedal to keep you from going past disengagement too much......
The only down side to the 6bbl engines were the rod bolts were not upgraded when the rods were upgraded. IIRC, the 4bbl engines also got the 6bbl rods....and the problem of rod failures didn't go away.I never power shifted without a rev limiter. I'm already shifting my 440 6bbl at higher than normal RPMs for what I believe is factory 440 6bbl parts. The springs, locks, retainers, lifters, and pushrods were all replaced by me, from necessity, early on. WOW what a difference that made, as the springs were worn but what is assumed by me and others to be the 292°/.509 cam really makes power, all the way to 6k. Only a dyno would convince me otherwise.