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Old 08-02-2007, 12:00 PM
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greg schroeder greg schroeder is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Scottsdale, AZ
Cobra Make, Engine: Superformance, Roush 427R-095, Pro Systems carb, 2" headers, Buckshot Racefab side pipes, 10s off idle start
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Excaliber
No, they don't! Without some serious modifications, which would include all out drag racing tires of enormous size, there is no way to put that much horse power to the ground. Drag racing calculators are NOT accurate because they assume we live in a perfect world. Perfect driver, perfect drive train, perfect traction. WAY to many variables in the real world.

As the car sits right now, as pictured, it would have trouble even hooking up 500 horse power. 1st gear would be a joke of tire smoke if you didn't launch it carefully ie slowly.
For a 740 engine HP 2700lb car less 18% power once to the wheels the perfect world would be 144 mph with 9.4s. Figure the car can't hook at all and the day is a DA of around 2000 ft and the run is terrible, do they still trap high 130s mph in the low 10s? I'm really curious.

I think the reality is most cars aren't making anywhere near engine HP once they get to the wheels. It's not really a big deal, but from what I can tell trap speeds are pretty close to reality for actual wheel power. My trap when on simple drag radials, speed calculator, comes out near exact to the actual wheel dyno. I think you're right about ET calculators, simply because Cobras generally don't knock off the best 60ft times.
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