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#1 | |
Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2020
Posts: 12
Likes: 31
Liked 12 Times in 7 Posts
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To quote Wesley Roberson, "it is the racers responsibility"... in NHRA D4 if you are torn down you will be held accountable no matter where it came from or how long you've had it if it does not match the spec's on the blueprint sheets for your combo and this applies to anything on the car/truck. there is some tolerance but only if it is not to your advantage. for example if you are supposed to have a 11cc dome and it measures less you will be given a pass unless it is way off however if it checks over by POINT ANYTHING you will be DQ'd along with other actions by Glendora depending on the nature of the infraction.. for combustion chamber volume you can be over but never under because it is an advantage for you. something that the old guys know but most newbies don't, if a valve contacts a piston and leaves a mark on it, you'll get tossed for it if torn down. Jackie |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: michigan
Posts: 162
Likes: 251
Liked 19 Times in 7 Posts
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NHRA has a way to check how far down the top ring land is without removing the piston. They have a small piece of steel almost thin like sheet metal that they put between the piston and cylinder wall. They know the size of the piece so they simply measure how far it sticks up over the top of the piston and subtract that from the known size of the metal piece and you know how far down the ring land is. Travis Miller showed it to us a few years ago.
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ss/gt 93 t-bird Last edited by dwydendorf; 08-09-2020 at 11:08 AM. |
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