That makes me hot and bothered just thinking about it. I know a little miata you could put that in if you want![]()
I think the issue w/ the perih port is that it only last so long until a rebuild is needed...at least w/ a bridge port you get a bit more life out of the engine...
but still, thats a rebuild that often...im sure w/ this being a hobby for Jenn they arent looking to tack on the expense of having to rebuild so often. They arent looking for a 1000hp car for the road courses...
There you goWe run a short, tight track, with very few "fast" spots. Anything over 300hp is almost too hard to handle at the track, and the 600hp corvette that runs there is almost completely undriveable. Also, it's a very bumpy track, so it spins up, then comes down and SNAP there goes the rear-end. It happens many many many times to the high HP cars out there.
We wanna go with a bridge for the longer life/reliability. It's completely out of pocket with only a few discounts from sponsors. Besides, the parts for the peripheral port (or the labour to make them) is significantly more expensive. And as mentioned, our track is tight, so I need as much low end as I can get to pull out of the slow corners (uphill too...almost 100 feet of elevation change).
Also, we're keeping it N/A, so the RX8 internals are for the higher compression and higher rpm. The class we run in is all around 200-250 whp, so this should be just fine when we're done.
As for the carburetor, most guys run carb in our class, but it's not a rule. Before we got the car, the previous owner had already ripped out all of the EFI stuff and computers, and wiring for it all, and rewired in such a way to run it carbed. And it's a decent carb we have. If we do decide to take the leap to PP, all we need is a new intake manifold to reuse it.
There you go
Like i said, nothing against a bridge, was just curious as to why you wern't going all the way - but now i know
RX8 internals - cool stuff - wasn't aware of the extra compression (don't have much to do with RX8's, noone here races them...) ... obviously the reason why the turbo crazies don't run them here is because of the higher compression... RPM doesn't seem to be a problem on them (dowelled up drag motors are good for 10k+, and its mainly ecu's being unable to fuel in real time at much higher that is holding them back from what i can tell...) but yeah - they want lower compression, not higher..so they take as low as they can get i spose.
Carbie - cool stuff...
Its a damned nice looking car though![]()
Yeah with ours, the person who built the previous engine knew very little about rotaries. He bridgeported n/a housings...and stuck turbo rotors in them and carbed it. The result? 8:1 compression (max!), and 149whp. BAH.
Oh and it had to run on race fuel.
This time is pump gas for us...race fuel costs too damned much.
haha... yeah...funny when people play with things they know little about...
Biggest shame imho is the carbie setup - the lack of control over fueling doesn't neccessarilly mean you're not getting maximum power - but i doubt you are getting the absolute most you could out of the power curve - but for a hobby machine, the expense of going back would be a little extreme (upward s of a grand for a decent ecu setup, the expense of replacing removed sensors, efi intake manifold, not to mention installation and tuning...unless you can do that bit yourself - not a cheap exersize).
you're rebuild sounds pretty good - should be pretty mean sounding - bridges and J's sound *almost* as nice as PP's'specially through an open exhaust.
I hear you on race gas... i'm struggling running my street car on 98RON with fuel costs the way they are... i fear the cost of methanol in the 2009 season when my track car is finished..*shudder*
awesome car.
If you want to clean up that rust on the steering column, get a Dremel with a wire wheel and go to town on it. I restored a 73' Dart and that damn wire wheel saved me a lot of clean up time.
And still no decals![]()