he was just the chauffeur...paid gig for Rebekah.Rebekah is there. Where is Rex?
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It was great meeting you at Laguna , the car is at another level to any thing I have driven before , looking forward to getting it on track in the new year .A few pics of BBRGT’s car from Laguna. Awesome machine and it was really cool to be able to watch it fly around the circuit! Impressive driving in a machine that’s literally substantially faster than the GTE-Pro car was!
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The pads are 30mm thick and you can run the car on 93 octane if you choose but Multimatic recommends race fuel .Yes, it was a fantastic weekend at the track. I'll post up some pictures from my phone shortly.
I found Tom Hutchinson there, who is the chief designer for Mulitmatic for the MK IV and got him yakking about the technical details for a half hour. It's a very different car from the Mk II. About the only things that are the same are the center tub, windshield, and a few other bits. Mulitmatic and Ford agreed that changing the center tub would be too expensive, so they had to keep that common, but the front subframe, rear subframe, suspension parts, all the body panels, etc. are different. Even the diffuser, which starts at about the middle of the car, whereas the diffuser on the MK II starts about 2/3 of the way back. That moves the center of pressure forward a bit and helps balance the down force front to rear. Consequently, the keel is different in shape and length. As you can see in the pics, the front aero is quite different too.
Speaking of down force, the car generates about 2400 lbs of downforce at about 150MPH. That can be varied by changing the angle of the rear wing, but not by much, because then it upsets that front to rear balance. Although Tom said that they worked to balance the car to work well at a variety of tracks, I'm pretty sure that it gives up top speed at fast tracks due to the induced drag. But it gets time back in corners because it can pull 2G's. That's getting into F1 territory. We discussed lots of other details, such as why the MK IV does not have front fender top vents, and the MK II does, but too much to go into here.
Engine: It's 3.8 liters, essentially a bored and stroked 3.5 block. Heads are worked to use the additional displacement, but it's not a higher RPM engine. Redline is still around 6500, IIRC. Race gas of course. Boost is not particularly high, running in the 1.5 bar range must of the time, maybe a bit more. Race gas of course. I didn't ask him what CR it runs, but I suspect it bumps up the CR a little to generate 800HP on that moderate amount of boost. I didn't ask what the rod ratio was, although I wanted to know that number too.
Brake are carbon-carbon, not carbon ceramic like on the MK II. The rotors have a lot of 3mm holes drilled radially to ventilate them and remove heat. Pads are different too, to match the carbon-carbon rotors. The pads are really thick, about 3/4" by my visual estimate. Those are intended to run a full endurance race. I didn't ask if the rotors are different sizes, but they probably are, since they use different materials.
Wheels and track. The track is about 40mm wider--20mm per side-- than the MK II, thus the bodywork is wider too. The wheels are forged aluminum instead of carbon fiber. I asked Tom why, and he said it's for durability and impact resistance, and the carbon fiber wheels don't weigh much less than good aluminum wheels. We discussed some of the finer points of using unidirectional carbon fiber vs. aluminum in wheels and other structural and suspension parts.
Suspension: It's different from the MK II also. Looking under the cars side by side, I could see the parts are different, but I didn't dwell on that too much.
Bottom line: If you are not already a race-winning driver in an advanced class, you will need a lot of seat time and coaching to begin to approach the limits of this machine.
Yes, it was a fantastic weekend at the track. I'll post up some pictures from my phone shortly.
I found Tom Hutchinson there, who is the chief designer for Mulitmatic for the MK IV and got him yakking about the technical details for a half hour. It's a very different car from the Mk II. About the only things that are the same are the center tub, windshield, and a few other bits. Mulitmatic and Ford agreed that changing the center tub would be too expensive, so they had to keep that common, but the front subframe, rear subframe, suspension parts, all the body panels, etc. are different. Even the diffuser, which starts at about the middle of the car, whereas the diffuser on the MK II starts about 2/3 of the way back. That moves the center of pressure forward a bit and helps balance the down force front to rear. Consequently, the keel is different in shape and length. As you can see in the pics, the front aero is quite different too.
Speaking of down force, the car generates about 2400 lbs of downforce at about 150MPH. That can be varied by changing the angle of the rear wing, but not by much, because then it upsets that front to rear balance. Although Tom said that they worked to balance the car to work well at a variety of tracks, I'm pretty sure that it gives up top speed at fast tracks due to the induced drag. But it gets time back in corners because it can pull 2G's. That's getting into F1 territory. We discussed lots of other details, such as why the MK IV does not have front fender top vents, and the MK II does, but too much to go into here.
Engine: It's 3.8 liters, essentially a bored and stroked 3.5 block. Heads are worked to use the additional displacement, but it's not a higher RPM engine. Redline is still around 6500, IIRC. Race gas of course. Boost is not particularly high, running in the 1.5 bar range must of the time, maybe a bit more. Race gas of course. I didn't ask him what CR it runs, but I suspect it bumps up the CR a little to generate 800HP on that moderate amount of boost. I didn't ask what the rod ratio was, although I wanted to know that number too.
Brake are carbon-carbon, not carbon ceramic like on the MK II. The rotors have a lot of 3mm holes drilled radially to ventilate them and remove heat. Pads are different too, to match the carbon-carbon rotors. The pads are really thick, about 3/4" by my visual estimate. Those are intended to run a full endurance race. I didn't ask if the rotors are different sizes, but they probably are, since they use different materials.
Wheels and track. The track is about 40mm wider--20mm per side-- than the MK II, thus the bodywork is wider too. The wheels are forged aluminum instead of carbon fiber. I asked Tom why, and he said it's for durability and impact resistance, and the carbon fiber wheels don't weigh much less than good aluminum wheels. We discussed some of the finer points of using unidirectional carbon fiber vs. aluminum in wheels and other structural and suspension parts.
Suspension: It's different from the MK II also. Looking under the cars side by side, I could see the parts are different, but I didn't dwell on that too much.
Bottom line: If you are not already a race-winning driver in an advanced class, you will need a lot of seat time and coaching to begin to approach the limits of this machine.
Ed - Rebecka let me have a long leash.Rebekah is there. Where is Rex?
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Yes , the dash photo of my car was at the Mutimatic factory , they tape over the fire button so it is not accidentally dischargedBoth the red and blue cars have tape over what looks like a button. Is that a 'fire" button?