Quote:
D wrote:
In drag racing a well setup auto will beat a manual hands down but the auto sapping power in any engine is due to the wrong setup and there are only few companies like KEAS that really know the Jatco auto. The Jatco is used in all kinds of cars successfully in 1/4 mile racing. Move futher up the auto food chain and there are liberty boxes and other specialised autos for strict straightline duty. Many full on rotaries are using the Jatco successfully over supra and other manual boxes and there are even some Kiwis with 2ltr turbo setups using it in circuit racing with the correct mods and doing well, I cant find the forum it was in atm will keep looking.
massive generalisation. It's not true for lower power applications. Rob's 240Z (tripple 40mm sloex L28 at 2850cc) ran 12.9 at a low 105mph with the manual. That's a very good time for the mph. All the drag racing gurus told him an auto would be the best way to go faster, but after many attempts with a built Jatco, various stall and diff gears, he couldn't get within 5mph and 3 tenths of his PB. Its not like it wasn't properly built or that he didn't try the right combo, it just couldn't match the well driven manual. There's a big difference between eeking out every little bit of a low powered car and dedicated drag racing rotaries, so be a bit careful applying generalised drag racing wisdom that autos are better to a little <1600cc 4cyl... even with turbo
How much power do you (realisticly!) think your turbo A series will make? 3spd auto and mid 3 diff gears behind a turbo A series beat a manual equivalent down the quarter? only if the manual breaks, which is a good chance I suppose... Unless you're going to be running low 12's there's not going to be a performance advantage to be had from an auto, other than consistency.
then there's the cost of this manualised auto!