Jump to content
SAU Community

Muscle Car Masters


Recommended Posts

  • Replies 41
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

48 entries for the GRP C/A race...would be great to attend. Seto in the M3, a few new entries inc the Listerine Sierra and Terry has apparently rebuilt the R31 and is ready to give Seto a run in the lil M3 :)

1 NISSAN HISTORIC RACING Terry Ashwood Nissan Skyline GTS-R31 Garage 17

2 JAMB RACING Jamie McDonald Holden Commodore Garage 18

3 GLENN SIMMONS Adrian Simmons Holden Commodore Carport 66

4 FAST EDDIE RACING Edward Singleton Holden VH Commodore Garage 26

5 BATMAC CONSTRUCTIONS P/L Paul Battasby Morris Cooper S

6 WEST RACING Troy Stapleton Holden VL Commodore Walkinshaw Garage 28

7 ON LINE LABOUR HIRE Norman Mogg Holden VL Walkinshaw Garage 24

9 PHILLIP VERWOERT George Nittis Ford Sierra Garage 32

10 S TUNNY Shaun Tunny Holden A9X Torana Garage 32

11 ROBERT INGRAM Glenn Seton BMW M3 Carport 78-79

12 R MARKLAND Rod Markland Nissan Skyline HR31 Garage 18

13 JUSTIN MATTHEWS Bob Holden Toyota Corolla AE 82 Garage 33

14 JUSTIN MATTHEWS Greg Keam Ford Escort RS 2000 Garage 33

15 M TURNER Michael Turner Holden Torana A9X Garage 29

16 PROTRACK AUTOMOTIVE PERFORMANCE Gary Collins Holden VL Commodore Garage 30

17 PENNINSULA BM P/L Dean How Holden Torana L34 Garage 27

20 MAGOO RACING Lindsay Woollaro Holden Torana A9X Gargage 16

21 FLEXICUT ENGINEERING Stephen Perrott Holden A9X Torana Garage 25

22 J MINA John Mina Ford Falcon XD Garage 27

23 SPIES MOTORSPORT Michael Spies BMW 325i Garage 31

24 ARMY RESERVE RACING Frank Binding Ford Falcon XD Garage 21

26 WARDSPORT Michael Ward Holden Torana A9X Garage 23

32 B MADDREN Brett Maddren Ford Mustang Garage 23

36 C MULLER Carl Muller Ford Capri 3.0S Carport 75

40 VELOCE RACING ASSOCIATION Bill Magoffin Alfa Romeo 2000 GTV Carport 62

41 P STUBBER Paul Stubber Torana A9X Garage 15

43 E.S.S. MOTORSPORT David Towe BMW M3 Garage 22

44 RACECARS AUSTRALIA Mark Taylor Holden VL Commodore Garage 34

45 A ALLISEY Adrian Allisey Holden Walkinshaw Commodore Garage 28

46 B CUTLER Bill Cutler BMW M3 Garage 22

48 K POST Kerry Post Isuzu PF50 Carport 63

50 MARULAN DRIVER TRAINING CENTRE Garry Willmington Holden VL Walkinshaw Garage 21

54 2 MINUTE RACING Michael Logiudice Isuzu Gemini PF50 Garage 29

55 NEVILLE BERTWISTLE Brad Stratton Ford Escort RS2000

65 J DOUGLAS John Douglas Mazda RX7 Carport 64

66 D CLARK Doug Clark Toyota Celica Garage 34

72 A PALLAS Anthony Pallas Jaguar XJS Garage 31

74 G KIRWAN Garry Kirwan Holden HSV Commodore Garage 26

76 PAUL STUBBER Jason Richards Holden A9X Torana Garage 15

77 C NEILSON Craig Neilson Mitsubishi Starion

90 ROBERT INGRAM Robert Ingram Ford Sierra RS 500 Carport 82-86

96 PROTRACK AUTOMOTIVE Chris Collins Holden VC Garage 30

98 C PARRISH Chad Parrish Holden VK Brock Commodore Garage 25

100 ROBERT INGRAM Chris Dubois Ford Sierra RS 500 Carport 82-86

116 A WORKMAN Adam Workman Nissan Bluebird Garage 17

123 D HOLC David Holc Holden VL Walkinshaw Garage 24

124 R INGRAM TBA Commodore VH Carport 82-86

200 MAGOO MOTORSPORT Anna Cameron Holden Torana L34 Garage 16

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://www.musclecarmasters.com.au/

Anyone going?

I scored tickets from work - cant wait!

Fathers Day tradition for me and the kids. Wouldnt miss it!! Such a great day. Was looking forward to seeing the PJ DR30 in action but alas they dont seem to be running any this year. Nevertheless I will drive my DR30 out there in support of the HR31's!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Terry has apparently rebuilt the R31 and is ready to give Seto a run in the lil M3 :)

Sub regs are wrong!!!!!....Saw Terry with the R32 tonight and gave him his subs reg's....he spoke some fluent other language when he spotted the error.

THE R32 WILL BE RUNNING.....lol

Should be a good weekend....don't forget to come down and say hello.....myself and a couple of other guy's will be dressed like clowns(90's style Winfield overall's).

Edited by Jetwreck
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sub regs are wrong!!!!!....Saw Terry with the R32 tonight and gave him his subs reg's....he spoke some fluent other language when he spotted the error.

THE R32 WILL BE RUNNING.....lol

Should be a good weekend....don't forget to come down and say hello.....myself and a couple of other guy's will be dressed like clowns(90's style Winfield overall's).

Thats funny,,,Terry told me he was going to run the GTR and to wait and say nothing. So I waited and said nothing. When I read troy's post I thought oh okay it not ready and he's running the R31 as usual.

We were always going,,,just to pop in and say hello to you,,,your old man and Terry of course. Now there's an added bonus. Do you have times when the Nissan's will be out playing?

Neil.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thats funny,,,Terry told me he was going to run the GTR and to wait and say nothing. So I waited and said nothing. When I read troy's post I thought oh okay it not ready and he's running the R31 as usual.

We were always going,,,just to pop in and say hello to you,,,your old man and Terry of course. Now there's an added bonus. Do you have times when the Nissan's will be out playing?

Neil.

times as below for today

10.40-11

12.50-13.10

14.30-14.50

16.10-16.20

sat

10.40 Q1

13.00 R1

15.20 R2

Sun

11.05 R2

14.40 R3

FYI all...Terry does not own a R31 anymore!

see you out there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

oooh, I just got some free tickets and spencer is running his new car (alfa built for a customer of his, tony). should be very quick. his old car that we built together absolutely blitzed at the events we ran at.

the sad bit is i'm not sure I'll make it as i've got 100 things to do tomorrow. farken. :P

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share




  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • A stand alone boost controller will not give you the control you need, unlike a modern ECU. Your boost will always naturally target the wastegate's opening pressure first, your controller then will allow you to add more boost as required.
    • I recently discovered that I could not remove the outer bolt on one of my rear UCAs. Looked like it was seized to the crush tube. It wasn't all that long since I had last had that arm out (I dunno exactly, but certainly <2 yrs), so I was a bit surprised. I thought I had stock bushes in the rear knuckles, so I ordered some new PU bushes and resigned myself to having to do some dismantlery....and some butchery. It was clear that the seized bush was going to need to have the bolt cut out of it and then possibly some more brutality after that. Upon getting the 3x arms on each side disconnected from the knuckles (with the exception of the seized one, of course), I discovered that I had in fact put PU bushes into the knuckles when I did the subframe conversion about 12-13 years ago. So, I say "Oh, good, I might not have to swap any of these others out". We set to work butchering the bolt out of the seized arm. Stainless blade in a big-arse Milwaukee recipro made short work of it, and also damaged the arm, which added a welding and grinding and painting step to the whole exercise. During the butchery it became clear that the bolt was not just seized but bent. Head scratching ensued, as it is hard to understand how that bolt could get bent. I did suffer a broken (stock) toe control arm on that side a few months ago, and drove some miles with some significant rear wheel self steer and lack of control, which probably was the cause. But it's still hard to understand how it would bend that bolt, rather than just bend the arm. But here's the start of the real discoveries. The crush tube was rusty as all shit. I mean seriously rusty. A little on the inside, contributing to the tube seizing to the bolt (along with the bend). But the outside had at least 2-3mm of compressed flaky iron oxide jammed in between the parent metal and the PU bush. This one was brutalised and still took some effort to get the PU off the crush tube. So I thought I'd inspect the others more closely. The one on the tension rod adjacent the bent one was first. I had to use a 2-jaw puller to get the crush tube out, and it took some effort. It came out looking like the first one. All 6 of them were the same, except for one that looked not too bad. Had some corrosion on it, but was mostly OK. There was also a significant amount of corrosion on the inner surfaces of the knuckles. They took some convincing with pointy tools to let go their grip on the inside of the holes they were in. There was no sign of the original (SuperPro) lube anywhere. I and my bro-in-law have never seen any crush tube end up looking like this. It was seriously like the car has spent time putting boats into the water at the boat ramp. So, it seems like the PU might have been bonded to the steel on both sides, which would have to make them work more like stock rubber bushes (where arm deflection results in twist inside the rubber). Despite this, I have never had cause to believe that they were so tightly bound up. The suspension moved up and down much as you'd expect. The car never made any noises in those bushes that would have led me to believe there was a problem. Maybe the rusty interfaces actually were "sliding". Anyway, lesson learnt. Even quiet, non-troublesome PU bushes should be inspected every now and then!
    • the boost controller allows you to adjust the opening of the wastegate (which only has one preset spring) I'm going to see how it acts on it
    • I studied the principle of wastegate to begin with. so if I understood correctly. the moment when the turbo "spool" is where the boost control begins. When the target level of "psi" is reached the wastegate opens to regulate the exhaust pressure passing through the turbo and thus control its speed and the rate of boost
    • Right.  I'll try my best at a concise "bring you up to speed" on stuff that may be missing here - obviously open to questions or further input from others as relevant. Here's a datalog from a responsive turbo setup with electronic boost control being used a bit, to keep it simple I've marked 3 points of interest.  All of these charts are on the same time scale on the X-axis, so you can reference what engine rpm is doing in the top graph, boost and EMAP (exhaust backpressure) in the second graph, and turbo rpm in the bottom graph. A) The turbo gets it's power from exhaust gas, and pumping air takes work.  As a result you can't just spin a turbo with a fixed amount of exhaust energy and expect it to keep spooling - the bigger the turbo (ie, the more air it can push) the more exhaust energy you need to drive it.   The most obvious ways of getting more exhaust energy are by adding displacement, adding boost, or adding rpm - but as you add any of these the turbo also needs to do a bit more work so there is a big balance of these things needed to even get to your target boost and sometimes that's not even possible. What you can see in step "A" is that there isn't enough engine rpm or boost to reach the level we want, so this is where "lag" is.  The dyno run continues and rpm increases, which gives enough energy to increase boost, which helps spool  the turbine speed up even more - so you can see that the rate that the boost (and turbo speed) are starting to ramp up faster than the engine rpm is, so turbo is really starting to wake up as the graph gets closer to point B....   B) At this point we've been able to reach the boost that is actually desired at this point.   To stop the boost from going further than this the wastegate will open and bypass gas past the turbine, meaning it doesn't continue accelerating at the point it was before but instead carry on at a more progressive rate which matches what the engine needs.   The wastegate will have a spring in it which is rated to a specific pressure where it will start bypassing, but electronic boost control (managed by the ECU) can adjust how much pressure the spring sees in order to allow some tunability on how much boost the wastegate actually sees, and therefore how much exhaust it bypasses.   The tune in this case stops boost from ramping up HARD at around 21-22psi just before 4000rpm, then as the rpm continue it allows boost to continue up to around 25psi higher in the rpm.   You can see the turbo speed fairly steadily increases through the rpm to ensure it's keeping up with the increasing airflow demand due to the engine speed being higher and boost being pretty steady.   If the boost dropped off after a point then you may see the turbo speed level off or even drop.   C) You can see that despite the boost pressure staying pretty flat here, the exhaust pressure is steadily increasing and at this stage has overtaken boost pressure.   This isn't unusual, and is largely as a result of the increasing energy needed by the turbo to pump more and more air to suit the needs of the engine as it revs out further.   There are a bunch of variables in regards to how much back pressure there will be on a given turbo etc, but its one of the factors we manage when sizing and tuning a turbo setup.   When exhaust back pressure starts exceeding boost pressure you will eventually start seeing signs that the turbo is running out, the engine gets less keen to make more power and it gets harder to raise boost further. In this case it's a fairly acceptable compromise for the power level (around 630kw on a 3litre engine with full boost by 4000rpm), but you'd not want to push it a lot harder than this.  The maximum speed rated for the compressor wheel on this setup is around 125,000rpm so you can see its starting to get close on that side as well - I feel like this kind of illustrates some of the turbo related things we both decide on how far to push, and are also limited to how far we can push depending on the parts combination. Hope this helps more than it confuses things  
×
×
  • Create New...