lil=john
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2013
- Threads
- 0
- Messages
- 68
- Reaction score
- 4
- Location
- Pembroke N.C
- Vehicle(s)
- 1999 Ford ranger
Sponsored
The "fix" is a new set of valve guides. The exhaust valve guide wears prematurely on some cars causing the exhaust valve to possibly break. Changing guide materials is all anyone "fixing" the issue does.From what I understand. The ls7 is allowed different cylinder heads to "fix" the valvetrain issues. Does anybody know if there is a difference in airflow between the two?
That fix is on production vehicles only from what I've heard.The "fix" is a new set of valve guides. The exhaust valve guide wears prematurely on some cars causing the exhaust valve to possibly break. Changing guide materials is all anyone "fixing" the issue does.
Where was the info of a head fix on race cars and shortened wheelbase obtained from?
The shortened wheelbase info is from PWC Vehicle Technical Specification PDF. The ZL1 needed a reduced wheelbase to be competitive, WB was always a concern on the 5th Gen. The new z28 has an increased track but I believe it still uses an altered WB due to no information being provided. Black Dog builds the Camaro's themselves. Not really what I'm interested in.The "fix" is a new set of valve guides. The exhaust valve guide wears prematurely on some cars causing the exhaust valve to possibly break. Changing guide materials is all anyone "fixing" the issue does.
Where was the info of a head fix on race cars and shortened wheelbase obtained from?
It's no lie, the classes have output limits, always have.I've said this numerous times: thePill is wrong most of the time when it comes to rules, his understanding of physics, his analysis (due to inexperience and inability), and most of which he posts is exaggerated, twisted, and complete nonsense. Take his posts for entertainment value and with a grain of salt because he's been proven time and time again that he's wrong and his tactics are really getting old by twisting others words around, straight up lying, and conveniently forgetting information just for the sake of his blind hatred for GM.
The 302R DOES NOT have a restrictor. :frusty:Even if the Boss and M3 had ZERO restrictions, parasitic losses on a 460hp engine would be around 400hp. I'm not sure why he doesn't understand that. Desperately trying to pull this argument together when there is none.
So now you have no idea what a Boss 302 makes. Stock, it makes between 370-390hp on average. A tune and exhaust is hold put a Boss 302 unrestricted, that's becauseca Boss 302S in PWC makes about 400rwhp SO, I would say the R and S are close.
Yes, you can buy the 302R from Ford; but it's well documented that Multimatic assembles and builds the cars for ford. I don't recall Z/28.R's having a Pratt&Miller billsheet. I'm pretty sure the check goes to GM when buying one; so again - no difference.3rd Party meaning a 3rd Party built the car. You can buy a Boss 302R and S directly from Ford. Ford is NOT 3rd party.
Everything you say is nonsense until you post sources :headbonk:The shortened wheelbase info is from PWC Vehicle Technical Specification PDF. The ZL1 needed a reduced wheelbase to be competitive, WB was always a concern on the 5th Gen. The new z28 has an increased track but I believe it still uses an altered WB due to no information being provided. Black Dog builds the Camaro's themselves. Not really what I'm interested in.
Its "major" changes are carbon doors, hood, and trunk. Which technically aren't needed when it's by far the heaviest car in the field.It's no lie the z28 needed major changes to be competitive.
So is the Boss and every car in the series. :frusty:It's no lie that the z28 is done by 3rd Parties
I agree, big engine, great chassis (although, probably not an 'advantage', just pretty good), and GREAT aero.It's no lie that the z28 has major equipment advantages.
Actually it is a lie. They came into the series at 3,300lbs, similar to the M3 and Boss; but they were too fast and needed a restrictor and weight to slow them down.It's no lie they were permitted a 500lbs weight reduction.
The Boss 302R and 302S no longer have a restricter, so, as of NOW, it should produce no more than 405RWHP per IMSA. FACT... Both GS and GTS are limited to 405 and 400RWHP per both organizations rules. I provided a direct link.The 302R DOES NOT have a restrictor. :frusty:
It boggles my mind that you don't understand that stock Boss street cars are making 395-405whp stock. In a quick search I have seen some cars making 'lower' 370-390whp. Either way, you are pretty clueless if you think removing the cats does not makes difference. You can easily search the difference with a cat-delete on a Boss or GT 5.0 its pretty substantial. Then a tuned exhaust and an ECU tune for 100-octane; a street car can easily make well over the stock 395-405whp.
It's called common sense; which you continue to demonstrate that you lack.
Boss - Tuned with Cat-delete: 423whp
svtperformance .com /forums/showthread.php?877788-BOSS-302-tuned-by-AED
Boss - STOCK: 395whp (will make more with cat delete and tune)
svtperformance .com /forums/showthread.php?976417-2013-Boss-302-Stock-Dyno
Boss - STOCK: 394whp TUNED: 433whp (will make more with cat delete)
boss302forum .com /topic/15781-mods-claims-vs-actuals-on-dynos/
Yes, you can buy the 302R from Ford; but it's well documented that Multimatic assembles and builds the cars for ford. I don't recall Z/28.R's having a Pratt&Miller billsheet. I'm pretty sure the check goes to GM when buying one; so again - no difference.
Everything you say is nonsense until you post sources :headbonk:
As found in post #2307:
Its "major" changes are carbon doors, hood, and trunk. Which technically aren't needed when it's by far the heaviest car in the field.
So is the Boss and every car in the series. :frusty:
I agree, big engine, great chassis (although, probably not an 'advantage', just pretty good), and GREAT aero.
Actually it is a lie. They came into the series at 3,300lbs, similar to the M3 and Boss; but they were too fast and needed a restrictor and weight to slow them down.
Your blatant lack of common sense, lack of sources and proof, and outright LIES baffles me how anyone could believe a word you say.
Does GM's crate LS7 make more than the OEM's 505? I thought I remembered 525hp somewhere. This is what the z28 uses in Conti if I'm not mistaken.Does the ls7 have the same cylinder head change as the COPO Camaro program? If so, what are the flow numbers vs stock heads?
That is the point I've been trying to make. That crate motor I do believe has the different cylinder heads. Being allowed to run non oem production heads is a major no no! Will the Camaro use the lt series next year? Or will there be another waiver?Does GM's crate LS7 make more than the OEM's 505? I thought I remembered 525hp somewhere. This is what the z28 uses in Conti if I'm not mistaken.
Another waiver, the 6th Gen. probably isn't ready yet. I have a strange feeling that the PWC cars were using a 110.5 inch test bed for a future Camaro car.That is the point I've been trying to make. That crate motor I do believe has the different cylinder heads. Being allowed to run non oem production heads is a major no no! Will the Camaro use the lt series next year? Or will there be another waiver?
http://www.karlperformanceparts.com...zxaf9nlnZGO_mRlgtngz6YWE_iuIjC0LsGRoCPnfw_wcBDoes GM's crate LS7 make more than the OEM's 505? I thought I remembered 525hp somewhere. This is what the z28 uses in Conti if I'm not mistaken.
..and the OEM Boss was based on that. That is homologation... It is titled and sold as the Boss 302 and sent to your dealer.Its quite sad how delusional and wrong you are Pill:
"The differences between the S and R race cars are not huge and are driven by the rules in their respective racing classes. Both cars are built for Ford Racing from bodies in white—the 302S by Watson Engineering in Taylor, Michigan, and the 302R primarily by Multimatic in Markham, Ontario, Canada. Both racing Bosses receive rollcages and production Boss engines (with unique Ford Racing oil pans), Ford Racing wiring harnesses, and computer with custom calibration for race fuel."
http://www.mustangandfords.com/car-reviews/m5lp-1204-ford-mustang-boss-302-vs-302s/
"...the Multimatic Motorsports division can be contracted for engineering and race team management. They currently produce the Boss 302R racecar in the Continental Tire SportsCar Challenge, worked on the FR500C, and their Multimatic Motorsports Lola B2K/40 won its class at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 2000.
The first models will roll off the line"
http://www.autoblog.com/2015/02/16/ford-canada-multimatic-gt-production/
"2010 - Tasked by Ford Racing to engineer and build the new Mustang Boss 302R race car. "
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multimatic_Motorsports