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Pass A: Spins its tires excessively. Using arbitrary numbers, the car passes 500 feet at 60 MPH and no longer has enough power to spin its tires.
Pass B: Less wheelspin results in a better launch. The car passes the 500 foot mark at 70MPH. Clearly this pass will result in a faster trap speed because the car is moving faster at the same distance.
Your logic is the opposite. Please explain where I am wrong.
You're saying that the most spinning is the fastest trap speed. Spinning isn't putting power to the ground.
One possible reason you can't understand is that different cars have different power & torque curves and different traction characteristics.
Edit: Forgot to mention that ultimately, trap speed is inversely proportional with ET.
Relation between ET and trap speed in drag racing
Last edited by mechguy; 05-06-2013 at 07:14 AM.
Most of the time if you 60ft better you will trap lower... the exact reasoning behind this I don't think anyone truly knows... its just how it is. Fwd cars tend to have high traps cuz they can't hook, awd cars have low trap speeds cuz they hook but lower et's... rwd it all depends on set up. Its just how it is. Think of it as if you cross the line sooner you have less chance to build up speed.
If you go to the track often and watch other cars you can plainly see it happen all the time. On street tires I will trap 109-111 but on drag radials trap 107-109. I would say this mostly applies to the average street car at the track. The full drag cars with countless hours in suspension and power to run single digits is a whole new ball game and shouldn't be compared to your 11 an under cars.
GTP's don't make much high end RPM HP - higher RPM only equals higher MPH with traction but I think you are kinda on the right track imo anyway...
My take is that when spinning or losing traction, which sometimes results in higher trap speeds, is due to of all the energy in a spinning tire that eventually hooks & allows a car to avoid a portion of slower acceleration with perfect grip. Your ET goes to poop but you ended up hooking at a slightly higher speed which is turns allows you to hit a higher speed by the time you get to the last 60 feet of the track (where many 1/4 miles measure trap speed - avg over last 60 ft). There are also a million other factors that come into play as no run is exactly the same as another. I have actually had runs where ET & MPH were the best of the night in a single drag, even over 15 passes in a night.
Is this really a debate?
True or false 5000 rpm in 3rd gear is a faster mph than 4500 rpm in 3rd gear?
There is no theory there. There is fact.
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