NA Obsession
After the first ride, I spent a few nights researching wheelbase, and looking for a wrecked one. I was dead set on putting a Chevelle body on the Tesla chassis. Something cool, you know. Then I asked myself why. Ok I’m good. Got over it pretty quick.
I was into the nitrous scene in the 90’s and always, repeat, always caught crap for being on the bottle. It never ended. I say run whatever makes you happy. I see myself doing a blower build one day, but for now my N/A build is interesting. That’s key for me. If I get bored with it, I move on to the next thing that interests me. Not interests anyone else, but me.
Driver mod just took in a whole new meaning
In B4 HPTuners figures out how to hack/tune the self driver logics....
I was into the nitrous scene in the 90’s and always, repeat, always caught crap for being on the bottle. It never ended. I say run whatever makes you happy. I see myself doing a blower build one day, but for now my N/A build is interesting. That’s key for me. If I get bored with it, I move on to the next thing that interests me. Not interests anyone else, but me.
After the first ride, I spent a few nights researching wheelbase, and looking for a wrecked one. I was dead set on putting a Chevelle body on the Tesla chassis. Something cool, you know. Then I asked myself why. Ok I’m good. Got over it pretty quick.
The Best V8 Stories One Small Block at Time
By the way, all of those cars are based off of cars that come from the factory with forced induction, which was my point. Not to mention the manufacturers spend millions of dollars developing them into endurance race cars. Is that practical for the average enthusiast?
If they can ever get to a point they can match a gas cars range, say 500-550 miles, recharge in the same timeframe as a typical gas stop, and not have a substantial price penalty then I may be interested. Until then there are too many issues, look at what happened during high travel periods on the East and West coast. It took some Tesla owners 12+ hours or even multiple days to travel what a gas car would typically complete in a few hours because charging stations were backed up with lines, the cold weather substantially reduced range, etc was a recipe for disaster.
By the way, all of those cars are based off of cars that come from the factory with forced induction, which was my point. Not to mention the manufacturers spend millions of dollars developing them into endurance race cars. Is that practical for the average enthusiast?
Again, not sure why you keep bringing up IMSA teams? Really has nothing to do with the conversation. Since you decided to bring up the Ferrari - yes, Risi is no longer a factory funded Ferrari North American race team like Wright Motorsports is for Porsche. However, they still do receive engineering help from Ferrari and share data amongst the other teams around the world that campaign the 488 GTE. A car that wasn’t built or developed privately. Also, a car that comes from the factory with forced induction. It’s a car that Ferrari developed and shouldered all associated costs, purchased by Risi. So again, massive amounts of money spent on the car by the factory to ensure it’s reliability in endurance racing.
I will give you that forced induction is very popular to make big power in time attack builds. Pretty much every competitive time attack car runs huge power turbo engines. Highly effective, however the cars are designed with limited cooling capacity to keep weight down, and only do 1-2 all out laps at a time before they run into issues with heat.
Of course racing is pissing away money, no disagreement there. It’s a contest to see how much you can spend, at every level of competition. Everyone has a hobby and deserves to enjoy it. Some people have bigger budgets for their hobby than others. This site is full of average Joes coming to learn more about their passion. If one of those people was thinking about building a car they planned on tracking and they stumbled on this thread, they would see some bad information regarding forced induction for road course use. I was simply trying to explain and support another poster in agreeing that there are a few situations where building a naturally aspirated engine would have an inherent advantage over a forced induction car. It was nothing more than that. You decided to fabricate an argument and narrative that wasn’t really there in the first place. I don’t think this warrants any further distraction from the original intent of this thread.
I was hoping for a challenge but you disappoint us all once again.
Here comes SLOWSEDAN aka DEFLECTO-MAN!
Last edited by 79_T/A; Jan 31, 2020 at 10:43 AM.
It's a patent pending design which has had huge success down here but the kits are super expensive.
Once the intercooler fluid passes through the chiller it is supercooled to below freezing temperatures which then lowers your intake temps of your water to air intercooler system of a supercharger or turbocharger. The interchiller can be fitted to any car or truck as long as the car has a water to air intercooler system (supercharger or turbo charger) and an AC system. It also has no limitation to HP, it can deal with it, so far the biggest build it has been involved with has made 2400HP. You are able to hot lap the cars at the track back to back with the same consistency every run, by the time you collect your time slip you are back to your minimum intake air temp and ready to go again.
The new BMW M5 with it's twin turbo v8 suffers heat soak also.
On a 32 degree celcius day the engine only revs out to 5500rpm in order to deal with the heat.
And the fans still operate after the car is turned off.
To design a really efficient cooling system would be expensive and also, the engine bay has hardly any room to move in those cars either.
It's a patent pending design which has had huge success down here but the kits are super expensive.
Once the intercooler fluid passes through the chiller it is supercooled to below freezing temperatures which then lowers your intake temps of your water to air intercooler system of a supercharger or turbocharger. The interchiller can be fitted to any car or truck as long as the car has a water to air intercooler system (supercharger or turbo charger) and an AC system. It also has no limitation to HP, it can deal with it, so far the biggest build it has been involved with has made 2400HP. You are able to hot lap the cars at the track back to back with the same consistency every run, by the time you collect your time slip you are back to your minimum intake air temp and ready to go again.
The new BMW M5 with it's twin turbo v8 suffers heat soak also.
On a 32 degree celcius day the engine only revs out to 5500rpm in order to deal with the heat.
And the fans still operate after the car is turned off.
To design a really efficient cooling system would be expensive and also, the engine bay has hardly any room to move in those cars either.
A2A intercooler systems are simply easier to package, and most importantly apart of the much larger turbo picture of budget oriented. A2A is KISS method, cuz it works for majority of intended use.









