Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
dieselgeek in HRM Ridler 40 Ford
Collapse
X
-
Tags: None
-
I saw that too! But this is Scott's threadMy fabulous web page
"If it don't go, chrome it!" --Stroker McGurk
Comment
-
Originally posted by DanStokes View PostI still can't believe that they exposed a Riddler winner to Bonneville salt! Guess they're fixin' to take it apart and de-salt it.
Dan"Somewhere the zebra is dancing". Garth Stein's The art of racing in the rain.
Matt
Comment
-
Originally posted by Orange95Z View PostI really dig the fact that the owner is willing to "drive" the car on the salt (towed there in an enclosed trailer and just wheeled around a bit), but when money is not a problem I guess why not?...
Comment
-
Somehow I missed this thread til now. Thanks for the compliments!
I never did get to ride in ron's jet (it's an Eclipse, small 6-seater). These guys put a post on the DIYAutotune.com facebook page asking for a tuner familiar with Megasquirt. Someone from the Early Hemi (engine masters) team responded with my phone number. I got a phone call from these guys who didn't want to tell me much over the phone, just that "it's a supercharged flathead ford with megasquirt EFI" and that I only had a few days to get it running. Then he said they'd send a plane for me, to the nearest airport. Then I pointed out that I was about 20 minutes away from Bennington.
When I got to the shop it was "leave your phone at the door" and "no cameras or photos of any kind"
This was the first time I worked on a serious show car. These guys quickly taught me to appreciate that their level of customization and engineering was exactly the same as something like an Engine Masters Challenge.
When I got to work on the engine there was a huge problem, they had a barn door throttle body that equated to the size of 2 1050 Dominators (according to Nick Smithberg). Nick and TJ (a CNC machinist) went to work on reducing the throttle area so the engine would be drivable.
We couldn't put water in the block before the show (leaks are bad, and leaks on a flat head are a guarantee), so we could only start and run it for 45-60 seconds at a time, then it had to cool for 4-6 hours. So there wasn't a lot of time to get it fine tuned.
When it came back from the Autorama, we took it out on the streets in Ron's neighborhood to get it tuned up nice. It runs really good now. Then we invited Elana and Brandan from HRM out to take a ride in it. They shot a nice video, found here:
www.realtuners.com - catch the RealTuners Radio Podcast on Youtube, Facebook, iTunes, and anywhere else podcasts are distributed!
Comment
-
That was an interesting experience to help out in a MAJOR time of need. 10 guys working (a few familiar faces from TV) around the clock to finish a car literally in pieces in less than a week and the fact of trying to figure out issues with less than a minute of run time. No pressure right Scott? LOL! I'm glad I was able to help out so Scott could do his thing.
Nick Smithberg
www.smithbergracing.com
Comment
Comment