[geeks] my (hopefully) last note on these car threads...
alex j avriette
avriettea at speakeasy.net
Fri May 17 21:35:18 CDT 2002
I'm a car guy. I went to school to be an automotive engineer. I raced
cars in the SCCA and on the drag strip (pomona) when I lived in
california. I grew up around cars. When I go to the grocery store, once
a month, I take the car I built to race, from the ground up. Maybe I'll
get some pictures of it this summer. At any rate, I'm an ASE certified
mechanic (if anyone would like a picture of the certification, I can do
that), and I've built the cars you guys are talking about, and worked on
them. We had quite a few ford "donor cars" in the shop when I was in
school (I had to have 2 years shop experience to get my certification,
per certification), as well as GM's (I am intimately familiar with the
GM 3800 supercharged motor).
I feel that my knowledge of mechanics and specifically the cars being
discussed (the 350 and 454 V8, as well as the ford 4.6 SOHC and DOHC
motor and the ubiquitous 5.0) makes me exceptionally qualified to judge
the capabilities of almost any given car on the road. Even without
driving it. Because for years it was my profession (and indeed hobby
being a racer) to know what was under the hood, and what options
packages were available. Being a racer, I also understand the advantages
to be had by various aftermarket additions to production vehicles
(intake, exhaust, heads, cams, chips, blowers, nitrous, etc).
I am not, as Bill states, out to prove everyone else is wrong. I'd
genuinely like to see evidence to the contrary. Alas, the facts are
making most of you wrong -- not me. Nobody has shown me anything
convincing that police vehicles are in possession of these phenomenal
horsepower increases claimed. I can believe the bigger motor is used,
but that's not something that is different from the "civilian
version" -- it's available in the "sport trim" as well. My stipulation
from the beginning has been that the police options, aside from the
radiator, transmission cooler, possibly gearing, and suspension tweaks,
are no different than the "sportiest" option generally available on the
car.
I recall reading a book that outlined the performance curves of various
police vehicles (I was trying to determine at the time whether my
personal car could outrun a police helicopter). I regret that I haven't
been able to find that book. However, I did find a site:
http://www.v8sho.com/SHO/twpiwif.html
which lists the top speeds for various police vehicles. None are listed
above 130mph. I see a Chevy Caprice with a quarter mile time of 15.03,
which is roughly as fast as your average Dodge Neon anymore. Seeing it
on the internet doesn't make it true. But it does make me feel a little
bit better about "sticking to my guns" on this one. The page also makes
the point of mentioning police cars contain prisoner cages, tools,
"action bag," and other gear, easily adding up to several hundred pounds
of stuff.
I'd like to point out one other site:
http://www.impala.net/9C1/CaliforniaCopCars.html
In California, at least, Law Enforcement seems to buy the right car for
the job (i.e., Camaros and Mustangs) rather than slapping a blower on a
crown vic.
I don't dislike any of you. Even Greg (really, no offense intended,
Greg). I realize this thread has been one of the uglier of late, and I
apologize for that.
Alex
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