The Doctor
09-21-2004, 05:31 PM
Post: #11
The Doctor
NoHachi,

But the hachi is alot lighter then the MR2 mkII or Supra mkIII asfar as I know.

Still, I am not sure if I'd wanne be going 250+ in my old Hachi, doing those speeds in my Porsche was crazy enough alreadySmile

Greetz,

Bastiaan "mux213" Olij

Moved down under, no more hachi Sad
Find all posts by this user
09-21-2004, 06:40 PM
Post: #12
The Doctor
Mux,

A cars top speed is not determined by its weight.
F=m*a -> acceleration is determined to a great extent by weight. When you look at top speed, the factors limiting speed are air resistance (large impact) and tire/road resistance (Very small). The second factor is the influenced by weight but only marginally. The greatest challenge for a car at speed is beating the air resistance (F=A*f*v^2)
The formula for air resistance depends on: frontal surface (A), drag coefficient (f) and de square of the speed (v^2). You can easily see that the force increases dramatically at speed.

Cars with the same horsepower, frontal surface and drag coefficient wil reach approximately the same top speed (+/-5% difference due to tire resistance). Try and think of some examples, you'll soon see what I mean.
As far as I know a AE86 is an aerodynamic brick with a huge frontal area, so something fishy is going on.

A wheel to steer the front of the car
A pedal to steer the rear
Find all posts by this user
09-21-2004, 06:41 PM
Post: #13
The Doctor
Mux,

A cars top speed is not determined by its weight.
F=m*a -> acceleration is determined to a great extent by weight. When you look at top speed, the factors limiting speed are air resistance (large impact) and tire/road resistance (Very small). The second factor is the influenced by weight but only marginally. The greatest challenge for a car at speed is beating the air resistance (F=A*f*v^2)
The formula for air resistance depends on: frontal surface (A), drag coefficient (f) and de square of the speed (v^2). You can easily see that the force increases dramatically at speed.

Cars with the same horsepower, frontal surface and drag coefficient wil reach approximately the same top speed (+/-5% difference due to tire resistance). Try and think of some examples, you'll soon see what I mean.
As far as I know a AE86 is an aerodynamic brick with a huge frontal area, so something fishy is going on.

A wheel to steer the front of the car
A pedal to steer the rear
Find all posts by this user
09-21-2004, 06:43 PM
Post: #14
The Doctor
SW20 weighs about 1215 kg, Supra MK3 weighs 1615kg Big Grin

Thats a big diffence with the AE86 wich weighs (with de 3S-GTE) about 1000kg.

And an other big difference is the final ratio (or something like that Tongue, in dutch its called 'eindreductie' i don't know the exact translation of that Smile).

When i'd had that 240 km/u taxi-ride i saw that it 'wasn't hard' to drive it, even at higher speeds.
A big difference with the Opel Corsa A 2,0 16V in wich i drove with earlier. when he hit the throttle, he had to use all of his capacities to keep it going in a straight line Big Grin

"It's all about the heart, the people who focus on parts, turbo's and all that stuff...they're just losers."
-Shinji Minowa
Find all posts by this user
09-21-2004, 06:49 PM
Post: #15
The Doctor
I agree with NoHachi on the weight factor...it is not very important at speed. BTW, ad is using a stock ae86 rear axle, and thus has the same end reduction/final drive. The supra gearbox will only add a little bit of top speed. Now I know Ad (the owner) to be a down to earth kind of guy, soif you could get him to visit the forum this discussion would have a lot more purpose.

FABRICA MI DIEM, PVNC!
Visit this user's website Find all posts by this user
09-21-2004, 07:04 PM
Post: #16
The Doctor
When i see him, i'll ask him.
But i don't know when that is, because i don't see him very often.

Sending an email won't help either, he is very rarely online

"It's all about the heart, the people who focus on parts, turbo's and all that stuff...they're just losers."
-Shinji Minowa
Find all posts by this user
09-21-2004, 08:14 PM
Post: #17
The Doctor
mux213 Wrote:NoHachi,

But the hachi is alot lighter then the MR2 mkII or Supra mkIII asfar as I know.

Still, I am not sure if I'd wanne be going 250+ in my old Hachi, doing those speeds in my Porsche was crazy enough alreadySmile
The fastest hachi in Denmark does 262 km/h with 2000 rev/m to go Huh Evil It has a 4AGTE engine with 440+ hp, BMW M5 transmission and Celica diff. Its actually quite driveable :o but noisy... It can be done Smile
This is the one:


Attached File(s) Thumbnail(s)
       

Sarcasme is just one of the things I offer Wink

Daily driver: '92 Toyota Carina E GTI
Rebuilt project: '86 Levin hatch
[Image: AEU86 AE86 - The Doctor]
Visit this user's website Find all posts by this user
09-22-2004, 09:01 AM
Post: #18
The Doctor
Ah, thats the guy that makes all those nice manifolds, no? What does he charge for his work? Ask him to join the boards, a little publicity might be good for him as wel.

A wheel to steer the front of the car
A pedal to steer the rear
Find all posts by this user
09-22-2004, 09:35 AM
Post: #19
The Doctor
The guy who made it doesnt own the car... But I will mention it to him Smile

Well I actyally dont know how much it costs. He says: " If you have to ask, you cant afford it" Confused I know that its rather expensive - everything is handmade Tongue

Oh I forgot to tell you that it made 440 hp @ only 1,4 bar Huh

Sarcasme is just one of the things I offer Wink

Daily driver: '92 Toyota Carina E GTI
Rebuilt project: '86 Levin hatch
[Image: AEU86 AE86 - The Doctor]
Visit this user's website Find all posts by this user
09-22-2004, 04:24 PM
Post: #20
The Doctor
That's pretty odd, using a 4A-GE for building a Turbo set-up...

Most 4A-GTE's i see are based on the 4A-GZE engine

"It's all about the heart, the people who focus on parts, turbo's and all that stuff...they're just losers."
-Shinji Minowa
Find all posts by this user


Forum Jump:


User(s) browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)

Contact Us | AEU86 | Return to Top | Return to Content | Lite (Archive) Mode | RSS Syndication