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Too big to fail
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Explain these fenders to me
I'll be buying a set of fiberglass front fenders in the near future, and I've seen these in the catalogs, but I don't fully understand the application. Do these require the use of wider front wheels? Do they mate up with a normal 930/965 front bumpers, or do you need a wider bumper?
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"You go to the track with the Porsche you have, not the Porsche you wish you had." '03 E46 M3 '57 356A Various VWs |
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Should be able to go 11's and 14's on wheels
The front and rear bumpers are wider than turbo.
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Thanks Todd I drank what? = Party out of bounds - PriceLESS - BudWIZER "Boy Im gonna burn you a new one! - A new what officer?" = night in jail 993'ish Widebody bastardo http://hypertec.ws/todd_porsche/photos/
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Isn't that the 3.0 RSR configuration? 11-inches in front, and what, 13 in back?
My guess would be the drag coefficient would be terrible, and that the holes in the back are to help with brake cooling. Time for a turbo, with that.
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Jack Olsen 1972 911 My new video about my garage. • A video from German TV about my 911 |
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get a GT-racing catalog it will explain you questions. and it has pic's too!
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mike k. cblguy04210@hotmail.com 67 911 w/2.4e |
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Kinesis Booth SEMA2003
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Thanks Todd I drank what? = Party out of bounds - PriceLESS - BudWIZER "Boy Im gonna burn you a new one! - A new what officer?" = night in jail 993'ish Widebody bastardo http://hypertec.ws/todd_porsche/photos/
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Are we using drag coefficient here in generic terms for overall drag? I know you, Jack, have often made light of your own cars cd but is it the cd that changes so radically or the resultant overall drag? I'm trying to ask is it due to the cd mostly or the fact that the frontal area has grown by such a percentage?
Obviously they both play a factor here, just curious what the biggest issue is. Obviously some air management items are necessary: air dams increase frontal area and wings result in added drag usually.
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Luke S. 72 RS spirit 2.7mfi, 73 3.2 Hotrod on steelies, 76 993 3.3efi TT, 86 trackrat, 91 C4s widebody,02 OLA winning 6GT2, 07 997TT, 72 914 v8,03 900 rwhp 996TT |
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I don't/didn't mean to imply that you were using it incorrecly, Jack. I know you know what your talking about, just didn't know how literal you were being.
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Luke S. 72 RS spirit 2.7mfi, 73 3.2 Hotrod on steelies, 76 993 3.3efi TT, 86 trackrat, 91 C4s widebody,02 OLA winning 6GT2, 07 997TT, 72 914 v8,03 900 rwhp 996TT |
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I believe that if you look at some "middle" rsr cars and 934's with "clip ons" you will see roughly the dimensions you are looking at.
Hope you got the HP to pull those things. David Duffield |
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Quote:
I'm a fiction writer, fer gosh sakes. Without hijacking the thread, can someone explain what the 'coefficient of' part of the expression means?
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Jack Olsen 1972 911 My new video about my garage. • A video from German TV about my 911 |
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cd * frontal area =realized drag
It is a factor used to determine/relate shapes to a standard ( a standard that escapes me at this point in the evening back East). Its those Physic types that love the term that seems to give a factor of "x" to represent a more complex hidden equation. Coefficient of friction, expansion, drag, etc.
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Luke S. 72 RS spirit 2.7mfi, 73 3.2 Hotrod on steelies, 76 993 3.3efi TT, 86 trackrat, 91 C4s widebody,02 OLA winning 6GT2, 07 997TT, 72 914 v8,03 900 rwhp 996TT |
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Too big to fail
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It wasn't obvious to me from the other pix how much wider the fenders and bumpers were over stock, but the SEMA pic makes it very clear - thanks!
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"You go to the track with the Porsche you have, not the Porsche you wish you had." '03 E46 M3 '57 356A Various VWs |
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Think of it this way Jack. A 747, and a 1/32 scale model of a 747 have an identical drag coefficient. But which one is going to require more energy to push through the air? The full size 747 of course.
The reason is frontal area. The overall drag is terrible in the real 747 because it's calculated by multiplying frontal area times drag coefficient. Think of a Superbike. They have cd's in the .85 range. Terrible. But their frontal area is so small that they have less overall drag than a car. In your case Jack, the flares not only increase the cd, but also the frontal area. Gotta love those lose/lose situations, eh?
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'69 911E coupe' RSR clone-in-progress (retired 911-Spec racer) '72 911T Targa MFI 2.4E spec(Formerly "Scruffy") 2004 GT3 |
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BTW, the reliefs behind the front and rear wheel arch help reduce drag by relieving the high pressure are in the wheel well. It probably helps with lift as well, in the front. And I'm sure it helps move air through the oil cooler and brakes too.
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'69 911E coupe' RSR clone-in-progress (retired 911-Spec racer) '72 911T Targa MFI 2.4E spec(Formerly "Scruffy") 2004 GT3 |
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jack if your really interested i have a great book about suspension that dabbles in aerodynamics. i can get you the name if you wish to read up on it. im sure your butt timer at the track is working quite well though as i dont as much time as you do.
tyson, how ya been, im gonna join the 4door club soon.....
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74 911s neverending story. two feet and a jetta for now. |
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