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-   -   Ford Focus? (https://classracer.com/classforum/showthread.php?t=69749)

Aaron Allison 05-01-2018 09:59 PM

Re: Ford Focus?
 
Quick Time does make a 2.3L Ford to Jerico bell, but not for all wheel drive.

https://www.holley.com/products/driv.../parts/RM-4058

I am sure Ross McCombs could make it happen if need be.

-Aaron

rawhide 05-01-2018 10:32 PM

Re: Ford Focus?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Aaron Allison (Post 562187)
Quick Time does make a 2.3L Ford to Jerico bell, but not for all wheel drive.

https://www.holley.com/products/driv.../parts/RM-4058

I am sure Ross McCombs could make it happen if need be.

-Aaron

different 2.3 engine, that would be the 2.3 used in Pinto's

goinbroke2 05-01-2018 10:33 PM

Re: Ford Focus?
 
I said this a couple of years ago, a rs focus or an awd Taurus with the twin turbo v6.
Finally they are putting new stuff in the guide besides mustangs!

Steve Polhill 05-02-2018 08:53 AM

Re: Ford Focus?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by nickh (Post 562183)
Wonder if Steve Polhill has thought about this combo lol


If Ford Gave me one I'd Race it :D Factory stock?

Dwight Southerland 05-02-2018 10:19 AM

Re: Ford Focus?
 
What happened to the Mustang and engines that were in the 2017 Ford tech information?

FED 387 05-02-2018 11:23 AM

Re: Ford Focus?
 
Since no others are not listed can they still race them (LOL)???

ALMACK 05-02-2018 12:49 PM

Re: Ford Focus?
 
The way I read the rule book under Stock, only the V-8 vehicles must have an SFI bellhousing.

Or....all vehicles running 11.49 or quicker.
So the Focus could technically run under the F/S index of 11.80, but not by much. Or add weight and run G/S

Either way the Focus would need an SFI flywheel and clutch assembly as well as a SFI harmonic balancer ( unless it uses a "hub" )


Since the car has a transverse arrangement, this is the closest I could come to in the rule book:

All front-wheel-drive or transverse-mounted applications using a
clutch and running 11.49 or quicker, for which an SFI Spec 6.1,
6.2, or 6.3 flywheel shield is not commercially available, must
be equipped with a flywheel shield made of 1/4-inch minimum
thickness
steel plate. Shield must surround the bellhousing
completely
except for area of bellhousing adjacent to differential
and axle shaft. Shield may be multi-piece, with pieces bolted
together using minimum 3/8-inch-diameter Grade 5 or M10
class 8.8 bolts; may be attached to engine and/or bellhousing.

FED 387 05-02-2018 12:56 PM

Re: Ford Focus?
 
somebody is building one otherwise they just "don't put cars" into the guide--Who??? maybe Ford???

ALMACK 05-02-2018 01:08 PM

Re: Ford Focus?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by FED 387 (Post 562226)
somebody is building one otherwise they just "don't put cars" into the guide--Who??? maybe Ford???

I'd love to try it. But those are not cheap cars.

With some 116 octane fuel, more boost and an open exhaust I believe it could make the power easily enough.
Just getting the car equipped with all the legal stuff would be the key

6130 05-02-2018 05:18 PM

Re: Ford Focus?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by ALMACK (Post 562175)
I would be curious how a racer will get around the SFI bellhousing rule with the transmission arrangement in that car

I apologize for going a little off-topic here, but for anyone considering running a manual transmission race car without a clutch can, whether the rules require it or not, I submit the following. Please learn from my error(s) in judgement:

Back in the '80s, I ran an NHRA Pro ET normally-aspirated rotary Mazda door car twice a week at two local drag strips. There was no commercially-available SFI Spec 6.1 bellhousing. There was also no SFI Spec 1.1 flywheels or clutches available.

The set-up that worked the best for me, was a stock cast iron flywheel, with a stock pressure plate, and a fairly lightweight clutch disc with a solid (unsprung) hub and no marcel spring between the facings. I experimented with various metallic pucks on the disc.

The NHRA rule book at that time said that solid-lifter manual transmission cars had to have a clutch can, and since the rotary has no lifters, I was able to get through tech without one, even though I was launching, shifting, and going through the lights at about 9,000 rpm.

Then in 1990, a flywheel/clutch explosion at the top end nearly cut the car in half.

It was an un-necessarily exciting ride, for a car that only went 111 mph or so. It sounded like a bomb going off inside the car. In addition to the concussion, the wind was suddenly whistling through the car, which was full of smoke and what I initially thought was flames (but turned out to only be sparks from severed battery cables). It blew the latch off for the front-hinged hood and blew the hood up momentarily, until the wind made it flop back down. It blew the brake master cylinder right off the firewall, so I had no brakes. I also had no engine compression braking, since it vaporized everything between the engine's rear main seal and the transmission's front bearing. It oiled down my slicks, which made steering kind of exciting, as my right hand wouldn't work (it had been resting on the shifter when the explosion happened, which stunned my right arm up to the elbow). Thank God I had routed my fuel line outside the front sub-frame stampings (for this exact reason), or I would have been on fire with absolutely no way to stop, with nothing but a single-layer 3-2A/1 jacket to protect me. I was afraid to look at my feet, because I thought I had lost them. Fortunately, the rotary engine is so small, that the entire clutch and flywheel are located forward of the firewall, so my feet were never in line with the shrapnel.

I will never make a mistake like that again.


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