JUCNBST wrote:Screw No2. Peice together a pm62 blower kit, run the gm reflash and you'll never have to refill aything and be way quicker.
-MD- Enforcer wrote:Ok, my advise is as follows:
- Remove all lose junk from you car. Remove jack and spare is optional.
- Some like to remove the floor mats, and some tracks make you...
- Do not run A/C or any other electrical equipment while running down the track. This is robbing hp, and you do not want condensation dripping on the track. You can be asked to leave.
- If your on street tires DO NOT DO A BURN OUT!
- Drive around the water box if possible, unless on slicks.
- You want to do a VERY small one to two revolution burnout to remove any debris on your tires. NOT A FULL burn out.
- Ensure your windows are rolled up, the starting person will probably tell you to roll them up anyway if you forget.
- Try to keep your cav as cool as possible. Open your hood if the weather is hot that day. If it is cold out, you do no want to get to much below operating temperature.
- If you have adjustable struts. I personally like the front very soft and the rear AS STIFF AS possible.
- Normally I slightly air down the fronts lately to like 28psi, and air the rear up to 40+psi...depending on the max psi the tire is rated for...
- If you have an option run the lightest tire / rim combo you have. You can also run smaller diameter tires to help with gearing.
- Do not AIR DOWN STREET TIRES! You'll just be making your contact with the surface worse.[\li]
- Check air between runs to ensure your tires are not to high on air from the heat of the track / racing. You may also need to add later on in the night when the track and air cool down.
- Do not be a dick and fully stage before your opponent. Pre-stage with only one set of lights lite till your opponent pre-stages. Then fully stage. You should be able to give the car a little more RPM to creep forward till fully staged.
- If you have time while staged. Take car out of gear rev car once with foot on brake to build vacuum. This will let your brakes hold harder, and let you launch harder. You should feel your peddle drop towards the floor a little.<---For Autos
- Right foot on gas to around 2000RPM with a stock torque converter, and left foot HARD on brakes.<----for Autos
- Turn off Traction control by pulling up your e-brake one click or by putting your car in second or first. just remember to up-shift. LOL<---Mainly an auto thing
- The faster car has priority on the return road. You should slow faster than he if you lost the race to show proper respect that you lost. This is a big pet peeve of experienced racers.
- DO NOT TURN ON STEREO in staging lanes, and there is no need to turn your headlights on. Most tracks have well lite tracks.
- If your running a .500" tree. Leave at the last yellow. I leave when the last yellow is turning off. If you leave at green....you already have a bad reaction time.
- Some drag strips make drivers wear JEAN pants, and some require long sleeves.
- Ensure your car is not leaking any fluids. some techs actually do their job and check the cars.
I think that covers most of it.
Quote:
The faster car has priority on the return road. You should slow faster than he if you lost the race to show proper respect that you lost. This is a big pet peeve of experienced racers.
-MD- Enforcer wrote:In my opinion. I would start with maintance first, and take care of anything that needs changed. Get everything running well, and then go from there. Tires are a HUGE factor no mater the HP level. With a sedan you should run 16.4-16.8. That is normal for an ecotec "stock" sedan. If you need new tires. BUY NEW TIRES. Balding tires are not slicks. ~Rant~
The first thing I would buy would be a warm / cold air intake.
K&N is very nice. Click Me.
AEM make the best in my opinion. Click Me
Stupid cheap intake. You can get them, but replace the air filter with a good well known brand, and fitmint is not the best normally...Click Me
The I would get the B&M shift plus or an AutoTrans Interceptor. Both work fine. The interceptor is almost impossible to find anymore, but is 100% plug-n-play. the classifieds here has them sometimes. Turbotech was the cheapest place for the Shift-plus last I checked. The Shift-plus does "need" to be soldered in place. The included splices will not hold up to the elements.
You need to get seat time at the track. You, are the best mod you can do. I would see where you are from there. A header --> Highflow Cat -->Catback --> Good Muffler would be nice. If you do the exhaust ensure you get polyurathane motor mounts when you install the header. Pacesetter "coated" is a nice cheap header. In my opinion the magnaflow catback is the best sounding catback you can buy pre-assembled.
I think this will help a lot.
-MD- Enforcer wrote:Ok, my advise is as follows:
- Remove all lose junk from you car. Remove jack and spare is optional.
- Some like to remove the floor mats, and some tracks make you...
- Do not run A/C or any other electrical equipment while running down the track. This is robbing hp, and you do not want condensation dripping on the track. You can be asked to leave.
- If your on street tires DO NOT DO A BURN OUT!
- Drive around the water box if possible, unless on slicks.
- You want to do a VERY small one to two revolution burnout to remove any debris on your tires. NOT A FULL burn out.
- Ensure your windows are rolled up, the starting person will probably tell you to roll them up anyway if you forget.
- Try to keep your cav as cool as possible. Open your hood if the weather is hot that day. If it is cold out, you do no want to get to much below operating temperature.
- If you have adjustable struts. I personally like the front very soft and the rear AS STIFF AS possible.
- Normally I slightly air down the fronts lately to like 28psi, and air the rear up to 40+psi...depending on the max psi the tire is rated for...
- If you have an option run the lightest tire / rim combo you have. You can also run smaller diameter tires to help with gearing.
- Do not AIR DOWN STREET TIRES! You'll just be making your contact with the surface worse.[\li]
- Check air between runs to ensure your tires are not to high on air from the heat of the track / racing. You may also need to add later on in the night when the track and air cool down.
- Do not be a dick and fully stage before your opponent. Pre-stage with only one set of lights lite till your opponent pre-stages. Then fully stage. You should be able to give the car a little more RPM to creep forward till fully staged.
- If you have time while staged. Take car out of gear rev car once with foot on brake to build vacuum. This will let your brakes hold harder, and let you launch harder. You should feel your peddle drop towards the floor a little.
wow that was really helpful, thank you! i was looking at the aem CAI but the installation looked complicated and it looked like it could take a while, and since i will most likely be installing the stuff in auto tech at school i want to get my car in and out as fast as possible. also, i was looking at headers, and the pacesetter painted header is 150ish and the ceramic coated one is around 300 if i recall correctly. why such a big price difference? is it just he coating, or is the ceramic one better performance wise. and if i got the painted one, what could i do to prevent it from rusting (i dont really care for preserving paint, i just dont want it to rust) since i live in michigan where they completely cover the roads in salt.
also, this is directed to boosted, i know i said the 16 seconds to prove them wrong, but i want to continue to race afterwards and keep improving, sorry if i didnt make that clear.
Addicted to meth wrote:Being that your a auto, I would go the supercharger route.
You could put a kit together for around 1k. Would get the results you want and make it fun, and reliable.
As also stated seat time, seat time, seat time.
when racing at the track playing with tire pressure can really make a difference even on street tires. Keep a log of all settings (tire pressure, strut stiffness if you have adjustable struts, launch rpm's, shift rpm etc..)
JUCNBST wrote:If you think you can handle installing a header , exhaust and intake. The gm supercharger setup on an eco takes the same skill level don't dismiss it. Research!
JUCNBST wrote:If you think you can handle installing a header , exhaust and intake. The gm supercharger setup on an eco takes the same skill level don't dismiss it. Research!
Y3llowCav wrote:JUCNBST wrote:If you think you can handle installing a header , exhaust and intake. The gm supercharger setup on an eco takes the same skill level don't dismiss it. Research!
I 100% agree. It's a bolt on affair and relatively cheap for what you're getting. I could not be happier with mine.
Just be sure on your first couple passes that you take it easy pulling out; worry about making good times when you have more experience with it. Strips are SUPER sticky and break parts if you don't do it right. My FIRST pass on the drag strip was the fastest 0-15 feet time I've ever had....then the wheels hopped twice and my differential decided it needed some fresh air. So seriously if you think you're pulling out too slow on that first run, you're not.
BuiltNBoosted wrote:Y3llowCav wrote:JUCNBST wrote:If you think you can handle installing a header , exhaust and intake. The gm supercharger setup on an eco takes the same skill level don't dismiss it. Research!
I 100% agree. It's a bolt on affair and relatively cheap for what you're getting. I could not be happier with mine.
Just be sure on your first couple passes that you take it easy pulling out; worry about making good times when you have more experience with it. Strips are SUPER sticky and break parts if you don't do it right. My FIRST pass on the drag strip was the fastest 0-15 feet time I've ever had....then the wheels hopped twice and my differential decided it needed some fresh air. So seriously if you think you're pulling out too slow on that first run, you're not.
There are ways around it... tire pressure, LSD's, pre loading.... Just need the seat time to find the best way.
Quote:
Strips are SUPER sticky
Addicted to meth wrote:Quote:
Strips are SUPER sticky
on street tires this usually is not the case.
Wheel hop is not because of traction but lack of traction.
Y3llowCav wrote:Addicted to meth wrote:Quote:
Strips are SUPER sticky
on street tires this usually is not the case.
Wheel hop is not because of traction but lack of traction.
Why have I never had trouble on regular streets? Moderators I am NOT promoting street racing, all reading DO NOT DO IT, IT IS DANGEROUS AND AGAINST THE LAW. Anyway, I'm not starting a fight but rather I'm actually interested. Everywhere else in the world I just spin, but on the strip I dig in and hop. how can that not be due to a sticky track?