Trent0 The Toxic Rocket Donating Members 574 Member For: 14y 6m 11d Gender: Male Location: Brisbane Posted 17/05/16 08:49 AM Share Posted 17/05/16 08:49 AM On my e85 tune the limiter is 6750rpm. I thought 7k on a built engine was the norm but because these engines have a long stroke higher isn't advisable (althought Jet066 ran up and over 8k and I believe kent battle did too for drags and burnouts) I make peak power at 5800rpm so I guess 7k isn't really needed either? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k31th less WHY; more WOT Site Developer 28,920 Member For: 16y 6m 25d Gender: Male Location: Melbourne Posted 17/05/16 09:45 AM Share Posted 17/05/16 09:45 AM Depends how big your turbo is, too, with regard to peak/rising-top-end power. A strong engine can handle the 8k rpm that qik1 and others have done, but is on the expensive end of the built engine market. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jacobmitchell92 Donating Members 370 Member For: 13y 6m 25d Gender: Male Location: Perth Posted 17/05/16 11:15 AM Author Share Posted 17/05/16 11:15 AM I have no doubt mine can handle 8k no problems. But Iv been avoiding changing into 5th gear at the drags as it puts a fair amount of load on the gearbox. I think my limiter is set at 7500rpm now. But I never touch the limiter. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k31th less WHY; more WOT Site Developer 28,920 Member For: 16y 6m 25d Gender: Male Location: Melbourne Posted 17/05/16 11:19 AM Share Posted 17/05/16 11:19 AM Yep, you're doing the right thing, don't change into 5th. It's better to over-rev 4th a little. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MattyP MattyP Cruise Control 6,317 Member For: 12y 6m Gender: Male Location: Central Coast Posted 17/05/16 10:51 PM Share Posted 17/05/16 10:51 PM Why's that? How does it add load Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k31th less WHY; more WOT Site Developer 28,920 Member For: 16y 6m 25d Gender: Male Location: Melbourne Posted 18/05/16 12:11 AM Share Posted 18/05/16 12:11 AM Turns out that's a good question with a reasonably complex answer... I didn't know the answer fully (and probably still don't! haha probably have to ask a gearbox engineer for clarification) From what I know (could be wrong), over-drive gears (anything with a ratio of <1:1) aren't meant to be changed into or accelerated in under extreme load because the driven wheels are running at a higher rotational speed to the engine with over-driven gear ratio's... This means the engine is trying to apply it's current torque (near maximum if at red-line in previous gear) to a gearset that is needing to increase torque to be able to push the bigger gear on the output, which means torque is multiplied at the connection of the gears and anything in between (clutches/synchro's/gear-teeth etc) may be prone to failure at the higher torque levels. This obviously depends on the strength of the parts in question... but as far as I know, gearboxes are deliberately weaker in these areas because those gears are very rarely used for maximum RPM and power application (due to the ridiculous road speeds required in these instances) to save money on parts at the manufacturing level. From my own experience, a lot of automatic gearboxes have a safety feature that prevents shifting into over-driven gears at WOT to save the gearbox from destroying it's own parts... hopefully that helps? Somebody please tell me if I'm way off base 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
discostig Manual mode ________________________ All day, erryday Donating Members 13,798 Member For: 16y 11m 11d Gender: Male Location: Probably above atmospheric pressure Posted 18/05/16 11:13 AM Share Posted 18/05/16 11:13 AM Oh so that's what they mean by overdrive gears, I thought it meant they were "fake cogs" or something and that's why they were weaker. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k31th less WHY; more WOT Site Developer 28,920 Member For: 16y 6m 25d Gender: Male Location: Melbourne Posted 18/05/16 11:20 AM Share Posted 18/05/16 11:20 AM The term "overdrive" can be used in a few different ways, but yes, when talking about multiple gearsets, it's either under-driven or over-driven (or parity, of course, that'd be the same gear on each side 1:1 ratio). Under-driven is (greater than 1):1 and over-driven is (less than 1):1. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jacobmitchell92 Donating Members 370 Member For: 13y 6m 25d Gender: Male Location: Perth Posted 18/05/16 01:29 PM Author Share Posted 18/05/16 01:29 PM I could be completely wrong but I thought it had something to do with the amount of clutch packs in 5th gear etc Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Elusivef6 Member 51 Member For: 8y 3m 10d Location: SE Queensland Posted 26/10/16 06:41 AM Share Posted 26/10/16 06:41 AM @jacobmitchell92 what wheels were you running on this? Were you still using the 4 pot brembo's with the slick setup ? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now