Re: drag race tips

From: WillTier@aol.com
Date: Thu Aug 03 2000 - 17:42:43 EDT


In a message dated 8/3/00 9:31:20 AM Eastern Daylight Time, tigers@bserv.com
writes:

<< Raise the air pressure in your front tires to reduce rolling resistance
 (40-45 lbs.)
 ... the idea is to run on the center part of the front treads only.
 Try to get an imprint of your rear tire treads to see that the full tread
 width is
 in contact with the ground (do a peel/burnout on a flat cement surface,
 examine tread
 imprint on cement and adjust air pressure accordingly).
 
 Remove as much weight from the front of the truck as possible and any
 unnecessary
 items in the cab (tools, jack, anything in glovebox/console etc.).
 
 Put Water Wetter (or equivalent) in your cooling system to help dissipate
 the heat
 quicker between runs and reduce the anti-freeze part of your coolant
 mixture will
 help greatly (50/50 mix should be a good compromise). Related in this area
is
 to get the truck as cool as possible between runs ... i.e. sacrifice the
 number
 of t&t runs for a longer cool-down period). Example: best t&t ets for the
 conditions
 at one track meet was 14.90 ... I passed on the last t&t after a 1/2 hr
 shut-down
 for cleaning up the track for a total cool-down period of 75 min. ... 1st
 round
 of eliminations, my et dropped 0.14 sec. from the 14.90. A 180 tstat will
 help as well.
 
 Run a short belt (bypass a/c and ps pullies).
 
 Reset computer just after tech inspection. It varies but, with my truck, I
 get
 best ets on the 5th and 6th run (some get after 3rd run) after resetting.
 
 Set temperature dial at full heat, heater flow to the floor only, and fan
 on full
 when going through the staging lines and pass water pit. Turn off fan when
 approaching
 tree from the water pit.
 
 If you have daytime running lights, disconnect connector from daytime
 running module
 (driver's side front inner fender beside battery).
 
 If track is pretty clean of loose debris, remove air cleaning unit from tb
 including
 tb gasket. Some have cut ets this way (I haven't) but it should increase
 your trap mph a little or, at min., make it more consistently high.
 
 Use synthetic motor oil.
 
 If auto., shift manually (use t&t runs to find your optimal shift points
 ... generally,
 about 500 rpm above where the peak hp rpm of your motor is). Load torque
 convertor to
 1000-1200 rpm (with street tires) at the launch, release brake pedal and
 wait split sec.
 to see if you have hooked up before going to WOT. Run with OD off the
 complete way.
 
 Try to run with a 1/4 tank full of gas. Take a full 5-gal. gas can with
 you to the track.
 
 Just some things that will help collectively. Hope this helps. Good luck!
>>

By Darn Bob I think you covered the whole show :-) Maybe ought to get that
up on the DML for future users.

Bill



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