Page 19 of 49 FirstFirst ... 9171819202129 ... LastLast
Results 451 to 475 of 1208
  1. #451
    ViperGTS
    Guest
    With all the shifting necessary you clearly see the difference to an automatic/paddle/blabla...system! My guess is 30 secs.

  2. #452
    Quote Originally Posted by ViperGTS View Post
    With all the shifting necessary you clearly see the difference to an automatic/paddle/blabla...system! My guess is 30 secs.

    No.

  3. #453
    ViperGTS
    Guest
    A double-clutch (e.g. Lambo) transmission system shifts with ZERO delay between the gears. No power loss.
    A shift in a Viper takes how long? Pressing the clutch, shifting, clutch pedal out... 0.5 to 1.0 seconds per shift? Power loss for some time.

    Do the math for a 7 min run with dozends of shifts.

  4. #454
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Location
    London UK
    Posts
    1,178
    It's about 8 secs difference over 13 miles using an automated geatbox

  5. #455
    Honestly, the discussion of an automated gearbox just to set a track record doesn't do anything for me. There are so few cars available that have a real manual transmission today, that I'd never want to give that up. The fun of shifting a car in everyday driving far outweighs saving a few seconds on a track. Plus, added complexity is getting out of control on cars today. Keep things simple - nothing worse than too much technology packed into too small a space. Something goes wrong, and a flat-bed trip to the dealer is just no fun.

  6. #456
    30 secs improvement with a DCT you say????????? IMHO Impossible. Ok think about this.. The Porsche 918 has the Viper severely outgunned in the power dept, and on top of that it has AWD and DCT transmission and instant torque from the hybrid power unit. By the 30 sec logic the Viper should not be within 6 secs of the 918's time. Also look at the slew of cars both more powerful, have AWD, DCT and lighter than the ACR that are quite a bit slower than both the Gen IV and Gen V ACR Vipers. It shouldn't even be beating the lighter P1 as it has DCT and 900hp with serious levels of down force.

    Also I've seen many tests over the years between the manual and DCT transmissions, even some with the same car that is offered with a choice of either transmission. The biggest gap is in acceleration where the DCT almost always is faster and its usually under a second faster than the manual from different acceleration endpoints like 0-60, 100 etc. But obviously the mag drivers were not power shifting the manual cars or the results would be much closer as we know from watching guys like PDV race and beat many DCT equipped cars by powershifting. When they did the lap battles between the two the DCT in several test was marginally faster with a few that had the manual faster.

    Has it been absolutely concluded that DCT is the fastest way around the track? It kind of reminds me of the HP/L and OHV/DOHC attacks the Viper has always had to deal with. Meanwhile its cleaning every ones clock with those supposed deficiencies.
    Last edited by Snakebit10; 07-28-2017 at 01:32 PM.

  7. #457
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Mar 2016
    Location
    Kansas City, MO
    Posts
    3,836
    30 seconds?

    hahahha

  8. #458
    Quote Originally Posted by 13cobra View Post
    the drag/downforce is quite a bit higher in the acr.


    I wish dom would keep both hands on the wheel more often.
    everyone has a differant drive style just like a ball player with pitch or batting i guess

  9. #459
    I'd love to see a video of the ACR and the Lambo cockpit views with the instruments side by side if someone knows how to do that.

  10. #460
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Location
    Arkansas
    Posts
    275
    Donating right now. I'd also be extremely interested in any memorabilia that might come out of this. Especially a "Ring King" poster to go with all the other racing hisssstory items I've collected.

  11. #461
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Dec 2016
    Location
    South Florida
    Posts
    2,046
    Okay, down the back stretch, the Lambo enters the straight at 6:03 and begins braking for the next turn at 6:36 -- which is a 33 second total elapsed time down the longest nRing straight.

    The Viper enters the straight at 6:12 (there is a post on the left behind the fence line that we can start from) and begins braking for the next turn at 6:48 -- which reveals a 36 second elapsed time down the same straight.

    Losing three seconds here is not that bad considering the aero disadvantage for the Viper. But, we should be getting back more than that amount of time in the long sweepers.

    I'll keep looking and comparing sections to see where the time is being lost.

  12. #462
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Nov 2013
    Location
    Chandler, AZ
    Posts
    2,463
    Quote Originally Posted by v10enomous View Post
    I'd love to see a video of the ACR and the Lambo cockpit views with the instruments side by side if someone knows how to do that.
    I tried to get the videos I know of synched up at the beginning; by looking at the stripes on the wall in one of the first corners.

    http://www.youtubemultiplier.com/597...erformante.php

  13. #463
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Mar 2016
    Location
    Kansas City, MO
    Posts
    3,836
    Quote Originally Posted by Scott_in_fl View Post
    Okay, down the back stretch, the Lambo enters the straight at 6:03 and begins braking for the next turn at 6:36 -- which is a 33 second total elapsed time down the longest nRing straight.

    The Viper enters the straight at 6:12 (there is a post on the left behind the fence line that we can start from) and begins braking for the next turn at 6:48 -- which reveals a 36 second elapsed time down the same straight.

    Losing three seconds here is not that bad considering the aero disadvantage for the Viper. But, we should be getting back more than that amount of time in the long sweepers.

    I'll keep looking and comparing sections to see where the time is being lost.
    GREAT eye!

  14. #464
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Location
    London UK
    Posts
    1,178
    Having now watched both the ACR and the 918 side by side on Youtube and comparing laps synchronously, I don't think the ACR will be able to overcome the 200+hp and faster gearchanges of the 918. I think we can just simply forget about the Lambo time-whether that was legit or not. If the ACR can do a 6:58 or even match the 918, it will truly will be a herculean and extremely respectable achievement. But simply put the 918 gets ahead and stays ahead extending its lead, pretty much from the first 30 secs onwards. Its ability, due to its superior power, to shrink any straights between corners is amazing. And its not that slow in the corners either......Oh and it does cost the price of 6 ACR's!

  15. #465
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Dec 2016
    Location
    South Florida
    Posts
    2,046
    Quote Originally Posted by AZTVR View Post
    I tried to get the videos I know of synched up at the beginning; by looking at the stripes on the wall in one of the first corners.

    http://www.youtubemultiplier.com/597...erformante.php
    And you can see within the first mile there is already a 2 second difference, probably all related to manual shift vs. paddle.

    I do see some fast sweepers though where we should be pulling back some time but do not seem to be.

    That, together with the relative ease that the Lambo driver is going around the track (damn guy might as well be texting while driving) compared to Dom having to wrestle the car in every turn has me convinced 1000% that the Lambo run is BS.

    They have less than half the downforce of the Viper and there is no way that car can carry the same (or higher) speeds in those turns and be so planted on a street-legal tire. Impossible. It's physics.

    Next time out, let's put slicks on the second car just for shits and giggles, and let's see what she can pull. I'll bet there is 10-12 seconds right there.

    In fact, what we should crowdfund next is a prize money pool. Bring a stock Lambo Performante to nRing from dealer stock (not an MFG car), on stock tires. Allow a transparent, witnessed, instrumented timed lap, and you get the prize money if you can beat the Viper time. I'd pitch in. Hell, expand it to any other production street car under $1m.

    Bring your NFGT, 720S, Performante, whatever you like. Let's go.
    Last edited by Scott_in_fl; 07-28-2017 at 02:38 PM.

  16. #466
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Oct 2013
    Location
    Brownsburg, IN
    Posts
    1,786
    How many laps did the lambo have under its belt? I don't know but had to be more than one. From the R&T article, the Viper lap started off on a bad foot. With track time things will get smoother for the Viper and the difference between the two will shrink.

    That led to some complications: As Farnbacher told me immediately after he set the 7:03.45 lap time on Wednesday, he had no idea where his braking point for the first corner should be—during industry lapping sessions, cars enter the track immediately before the first turn at a slow speed.

    He also mentioned having trouble with the Viper's transmission. Farnbacher was shifting at full-throttle to try to make up the inherent time loss of a manual transmission, and after his lap he mentioned that the gearbox was balking, particularly on 2-3 upshifts. In the video, you can see a few moments where he's fighting the gear lever.

    Finally, Farnbacher admitted to a bit of a goof: For the first few moments of the flying lap, the Viper's traction control was in its most aggressive setting. American cars reset traction control to full-on whenever they're turned off, a fact the German driver didn't know until he'd started this lap. You can see him prodding at the steering wheel buttons early in the run, eventually getting the car's traction and stability control systems into Track mode.

  17. #467
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Nov 2013
    Location
    Chandler, AZ
    Posts
    2,463
    Quote Originally Posted by AZTVR View Post
    I tried to get the videos I know of synched up at the beginning; by looking at the stripes on the wall in one of the first corners.

    http://www.youtubemultiplier.com/597...erformante.php
    Here is a second try, re-synching the videos at the first cross over bridge 90 seconds into the run, just to try to see how both cars/drivers are handling the same curves. They seem closer after this point.

    http://www.youtubemultiplier.com/597...e-from-bri.php

  18. #468
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Location
    London UK
    Posts
    1,178
    Quote Originally Posted by AZTVR View Post
    Here is a second try, re-synching the videos at the first cross over bridge 90 seconds into the run, just to try to see how both cars/drivers are handling the same curves. They seem closer after this point.

    http://www.youtubemultiplier.com/597...e-from-bri.php
    Can you do this with the 918 please?

  19. #469
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Location
    London UK
    Posts
    1,178
    Quote Originally Posted by AZTVR View Post
    Here is a second try, re-synching the videos at the first cross over bridge 90 seconds into the run, just to try to see how both cars/drivers are handling the same curves. They seem closer after this point.

    http://www.youtubemultiplier.com/597...e-from-bri.php
    Its also running the ACR lap ahead a couple of seconds for some reason. Or maybe you just want to see the curves on their own I guess...

  20. #470
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Nov 2013
    Location
    Chandler, AZ
    Posts
    2,463
    Quote Originally Posted by stradman View Post
    Its also running the ACR lap ahead a couple of seconds for some reason. Or maybe you just want to see the curves on their own I guess...
    Yes, on the second video, I just wanted to see the drivers "restarted" side by side doing the same curves.

  21. #471
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Dec 2016
    Location
    South Florida
    Posts
    2,046
    The way to really do this is to break the track up into various sections and time each section, for each car, to see where the larger differentials are coming from.

  22. #472
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Mar 2016
    Location
    Flower Mound, TX
    Posts
    799
    Quote Originally Posted by Scott_in_fl View Post
    That, together with the relative ease that the Lambo driver is going around the track (damn guy might as well be texting while driving) compared to Dom having to wrestle the car in every turn has me convinced 1000% that the Lambo run is BS.
    That brings up a good point and something I'm curious about. Watching the video of Randy Pobst break the Laguna Seca record, he looks to be wrestling the car significantly less. Are the track surfaces really that different, or is there a major suspension tuning difference between the LS car and the NR car? In the NR video it looks to be quite a task just to keep the car pointed in the right direction and I was a little surprised to see that. Awesome run nonetheless, and the driver is a beast.

  23. #473
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Location
    London UK
    Posts
    1,178
    Quote Originally Posted by AZTVR View Post
    Here is a second try, re-synching the videos at the first cross over bridge 90 seconds into the run, just to try to see how both cars/drivers are handling the same curves. They seem closer after this point.

    http://www.youtubemultiplier.com/597...e-from-bri.php
    Yes that track has some major undulations...

  24. #474
    Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Nov 2013
    Location
    Chandler, AZ
    Posts
    2,463
    Quote Originally Posted by stradman View Post
    Can you do this with the 918 please?
    http://www.youtubemultiplier.com/597...orsche-918.php

    Quote Originally Posted by Scott_in_fl View Post
    The way to really do this is to break the track up into various sections and time each section, for each car, to see where the larger differentials are coming from.
    Yes, definitely. But, really only pertinent after the driver has some laps at full speed and has learned the car's idiosyncrasies at those speeds on that track.

  25. #475
    ViperGTS
    Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by Scott_in_fl View Post
    And you can see within the first mile there is already a 2 second difference, probably all related to manual shift vs. paddle.
    Multiply by 13 (miles).


 
Page 19 of 49 FirstFirst ... 9171819202129 ... LastLast

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •