Who supplied the rear wing kit?A few pictures before she got loaded up in the trailer.
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Who supplied the rear wing kit?A few pictures before she got loaded up in the trailer.
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The rear wing I had made from scratch by Bryan Fondren on North Carolina since no one offered a body width one for the 75. I didn't like any of the trunk width spoilers.Who supplied the rear wing kit?
I run it whereever I can if the track holds if im in a competitive race. but I will probably start out with keeping it at 20 psi I know im at a good surface and then add some more. I want to see how it performs down track on this new setup.Sounds and looks good. And making ~22 hp per pound on the 16-20 psi jump says the turbos are still pretty efficient up there. Is 20 pounds where you run it?
Way to go guy. Real question is how is big blue?How’s the new engine? Running good? And have you had a chance to test the new wastegates?
edited to add;
Sorry I forgot about the dyno day you already did. So my questions have already been answered. Duh
Yeah, i have it reinstalled for now, i don't doubt it ill work fine, and i guarantee its on there properly now. But i sent pictures and info to ATI anyway to see if they think its strong enough to hold up as is or if they think it'll split after some spirited driving eventually. It help up fine on the dyno for all those beatings so we will see what they say.Unbelievable the amount of disregard for the simplest of tasks. Whomever installed that balancer needs a swift kick in the nuts.
In my ongoing continued education program to expand my horizons, I stumbled upon this YouTube video that covers the history of the Small Block Chevy with the majority of focus on the LSx engines. They were truly a remarkable engineering achievement:
20 psi is perfectly fine on an LS, even for a stock bottom end never been apart engine. A lot of times people will drop the pistons out and regap the rings for boost and then reinstall. But even untouched they respond very well to forced induction. As long as your tune-up is properly set for it and you don't have some kind of mechanical failure then it is a perfectly safe number. I like having more in reserve if i need it. I like that i wont have to push this one as hard as i did the last one because it makes just over 200 more whp at the same 20psi as my 370" LS.Forgive my LS ignorance, but is 20PSI an actually safe number? No worries about blowin it all to hell and back? And those dyno numbers are badass!
That's impressive. I like how they're built. I helped a friend with a 5.3 and the thing had 4 bolt main caps, plus they were also cross bolted. It's hard to deny those engines. They sure are fugly in stock form, though. lol20 psi is perfectly fine on an LS, even for a stock bottom end never been apart engine. A lot of times people will drop the pistons out and regap the rings for boost and then reinstall. But even untouched they respond very well to forced induction. As long as your tune-up is properly set for it and you don't have some kind of mechanical failure then it is a perfectly safe number. I like having more in reserve if i need it. I like that i wont have to push this one as hard as i did the last one because it makes just over 200 more whp at the same 20psi as my 370" LS.