tube80z
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Everything posted by tube80z
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240z SCCA vintage race car, restoration
tube80z replied to AydinZ71's topic in S30 Series - 240z, 260z, 280z
Almost all the new throttlebodies have them as a cam and you can either borrow one or make something similar. If you wanted to do it so that the linkage looked stock you probably could hide this under the dash or put the same on the firewall for the cable from the pedal would wrap onto. I think you could make different options to fine tune the response to where it works best for you. I stole the idea from John DeArman (sp?) who used to have a Z car technical magazine. And was a prolific poster on the old. alt.hotrod Usenet news channel. Cary -
240z SCCA vintage race car, restoration
tube80z replied to AydinZ71's topic in S30 Series - 240z, 260z, 280z
One thing you can try to make the ITBs more drivable is to create a progressive throttle cam so the throttle moves a lot less on the initial pedal movement. I had a car with light-switch SUs and this helped add some drivability to the car. Cary -
@Dat73z Give it a try now.
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Hi Randall, I added your unbanned your old account (Randall/K12) and you should be good to go. I probably screwed up and banned you by mistake. We've had a lot of problems with spammers and scanners lately so all the forum admin tasks are manually done edited rather than allowing them to be automated we switched to manual. This helps keep accounts from spamming after they site dormant for a while. That shouldn't have bothered you with an existing account so I'm not sure what I did make this happen. I'm sorry for any inconvenience this caused. If you have any problems getting back into the account please let me know. Thanks, Cary
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240z SCCA vintage race car, restoration
tube80z replied to AydinZ71's topic in S30 Series - 240z, 260z, 280z
Also check out the MaxxECU range. Andy Whittle has many nice things to say about them. They have a lot of inputs/outputs that can be configured any way you want. Andy is the MLVHD facebook admin and has been dealing with club racer tunes and hardware for years. I like that he's always looking for deals and using OEM parts for sensors rather than the $$$ branded versions. Cary -
240z SCCA vintage race car, restoration
tube80z replied to AydinZ71's topic in S30 Series - 240z, 260z, 280z
Nice work Aydin! Here's my trick when it comes to back purging stainless exhaust tubing. I use a pig. Maybe that's not the right term but it's a device that you can run down the tubing connected to a cable/hose so that you only purge a few inches (8-10) near your weld. You're probably thinking this is some high dollar piece of equipment. It's not, it's a water balloon (more than 1) connected to the end of an air hose I put through the exhaust. I use a valve to inflate/deflate on the other end. When you need to weld the next bit of tubing you pull out enough hose, keeping track of how much you need to clear the weld area. Sometimes you need to use foil to protect the "pig" from sparks or sharp edges. Maybe this will work for you maybe, maybe not. I'm just a huge cheap ass who hates wasting expensive gas. The last time I filled my argon was 2016 and I complained about the price then. I just checked how much it costs now and almost broke my office chair from falling over. -
Need Help Retrieving my user name and password
tube80z replied to aka monZter's topic in Site Support
PM me, I can help. Cary -
Greetings Everyone, Due to the increase in spammers HybridZ, registration has changed from being automatic to manual. That means one of the Admins will need to approve any new registrants. If you ask or tell someone about HybridZ (please do) let them know registration isn't automatic anymore. We'll do our best to stay on top of any additions and hopefully you all will see a lot less spam. Thanks, The HybridZ moderation team
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Hi Clarke, Have you contacted any of the dealers that sell Race Technology equipment for help? I was thinking RT and Veracity perhaps as a start. I have some code from an FSAE project that used Aurduinos and CAN to send along data into a CAN stream. It has sample code but I haven't verified if it works or not. I'll look for that and forward to you. Cary
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240z SCCA vintage race car, restoration
tube80z replied to AydinZ71's topic in S30 Series - 240z, 260z, 280z
Costco has a god cleaner with no ammonia called sprayaway. I used to have to get it from an industrial cleaner company and it was expensive. I also highly recommend the Novus products. -
I tried to manually add an amount. Let me know if that didn't work. If not, then Dan will need to take a look. best, Cary
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That's a large cell. Is it set up for longer enduro style events or are the images misleading on size?
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Sorry, I should have included a picture but that is what I meant.
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I added points to a few of you to get the new status you see. There's a system in place that adds points for various things but I don't know if it always works. It appears it was all reset at some point. Maybe a software update lost it all. Like Jon said it doesn't change your ability to post. I'd like to change it so new users can't until they are validated to reduce spam but I haven't found that setting. And I don't think I'd change things unless getting Dan's blessing that it made sense.
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On the swan neck it doesn't need to go up and then down to the top. You can have it come straight in on the wing nose and mount that way too. Take a look at all the F1 cars for reference. This will allow you to get the wing as high as if you mounted under. XP rules also say wing or spoiler but not both. Out side of that you can do whatever you want. I'd keep the 10 incher and drop that angle down to less then 30 or so and see how it change flow on the wing. You can use oil drops or tufts if you point a camera to see how they are moving.
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Looks good to me. If that ends up being in the way you could always have a small piece that comes above the body and pip pins to the wing's uprights. You could potentially use that system to shift the wing around if you wanted a track setup vs. an XP/SCCA legal setup. Personally, I'd not use aluminum up rights and use steel tube. Then 3d print a a aero shaped cover. I looked up the cost of alloy and choked a little. I keep thinking pre-covid prices for things and getting the shock of what they are now. Keep up the good work! Cary
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Hi Jon, You don't have to drill any holes into your panels. You use a thin pressure puck mounted to the surface usually with tape. If you look at a few of Julian Edgars vids he shows off a purchased one. It's a slice with a axial hole down to a radial passage that you hook the tube into and either run to a pressure sensor, manometer, or magnehelic guage. You can find some gauges in inches of water on Amazon too. cary
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Yep, I'm a moron
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That's where I want to disagree. While many amateurs' may not have access to CFD, wind tunnels, or advanced DA that doesn't mean you can't test these things in a more scientific manner to remove the butt dyno from the experiment. As Jon pointed out I messed up the name of Julian Edgar who has a decent book and a YouTube channel that promotes the content. If you sit through his videos you'll get the high points of what's needed. If you have a newer gopro you also have a data logger and you can record old school manometers inside the car to see if you're change made a difference or not. There's simple coast down testing that can be used to determine drag, etc. It doesn't appear this person did any of that and copied what looked useful here and there. If someone paid for a lot of development and has the same car as you do then this process may work but you also need to know what to change to keep the car balanced. One of the downsides of downforce is that weather has an effect and the more you add (downforce) the more you'll need to change things to stay balanced. Hope that helps, Cary
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According to the video they wanted to reduce drag. That mod will increase it. This video is a total waste of time. It's mostly opinion from seeing what a bunch of other people did on youtube and trying that. No data logging, no attempts at actual testing, etc. If you look at Julien Bailey's youtube videos he shows you how to test this stuff for real in simple ways. The gurney should be on the front of the fender and not the rear. Cary
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McMaster reference was to find a part and I figured you'd use that to get a cheaper price. I rarely use them myself unless I'm in a real bind and need something right now. It's cool that I can drive over to a warehouse and pick it up.
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I thought I might add a few words. While I work in big tech, I can't speak for my company nor any others. I would say that almost all the legitimate companies would never be using this to screw around on public forums. We do test internally with employees (eating our own dog food), solicit public beta testers, and often do customer research under NDA or using third-party research firms. This is probably some bad agent trying it out their own version of a tool to see if it works better than other tools they have in their disposal. Hope that helps, cary