At that drag strip rental we had in January, I had my Vbox logging each run in my 2014 Viper TA. Many other car forums like to compare 60-130 mph times, to indicate highway acceleration without traction issues. We had pretty awful traction issues that day at the track, especially on the 1-2 shift. Unfortunately for the Gen 5 Viper, this 60 mph is right at the top of 1st gear, so the shift time and wheel spin going into 2nd can sometimes delay the 60-130 time.
This series of runs will illustrate how timing the 1-2 shift and having no spin will affect these 60-130 mph times.
60-130 mph 7.82 seconds (3 shifts)
60-130 mph 7.80 seconds (3 shifts)
60-130 mph 7.80 seconds (3 shifts)
60-130 mph 7.78 seconds (3 shifts)
60-130 mph 7.32!! seconds (2 shifts)
As you can see, the very last one was different. I made the 1-2 shift before 60 mph, which allowed me to cleanly accelerate from 60 mph without having to shift or having the resulting tire spin to slow my time down. That last run was also powershifting (no lifting throttle) and the 1/4-mile trap speed indicated 132 mph on the Vbox. Pretty accurate for that day, I went 131 on the timeslip. http://nineballgarage.com/2015/01/dr...ellcat-vs-zr1/
Anyways, these cars are FAST compared to several other cars, especially in that 60-130 range. Some other comparison data:
2014 Porsche 911 TT PDK 60-130: 8.49, 8.42, and 8.59
2015 Corvette Z06 A8 60-130: 8.30, 8.48, and 8.37
http://www.corvetteforum.com/forums/...0-150-mph.html
Others examples found:
7.0 - Ferrari Enzo
7.2 - Mercedes SLR McLaren
7.2 - Porsche 997 GT2, 1-shift
7.3 - Porsche Carrera GT
7.3 - Ferrari Enzo
7.8 - Chevrolet Corvette ZR1, 2-shifts
7.8 - Lamborghini LP640, stock, 2-shifts
7.8 - Chevrolet Corvette C6 Z06, 2-shifts
http://www.6speedonline.com/forums/9...le-thread.html
And, here is what my 2006 Viper usually runs, mid-4s. Haha
Tony
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