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Jerry
just checked my inbox, message must not have went troughWildfire II wrote:Liqkid You have a message!!
I think some of the guys that run liquid cooled engines just have quick couplers. They "plug" into a cooler that has a circulation pump to cool the engine when they get back to the pits, much like Pro Stock drag cars. An engine driven water pump is lost HP.JD600 wrote:It just seems to me like if you are ONLY worried about going 600 feet, there is absolutely no reason to waste valuable weight on a liquid cooled jug and head, radiator, water pump, and coolant. If set up identically, i would say you'll see little if any difference between a cyclone and a liquifire in that short of a run....
DE
liquidatorkid wrote: .
To me it isn't about winning a trophy, or a plaque (those are what we are running for no $cash prizes. To me its the pride of building a sled with my own two hands from the ground up, in my small back yard. seeing it all come together while giving it my own personal custom touches, as if i where racing back in the day, i built it to the "style" of sleds that i like, meeting the rules and reg. the rules for the track state "A sled must be equipped with a working teather, working brakes, and a clutch guard..that pretty much leaves the rest up in the air.
in a couple weeks im planning on starting mocking up a 73 chaparral thunderbird with a 18" wide trck and a liquid cooled 550 outta a 96 arctic cat cougar. rumor has it the engine makes about 90hp on a light weight chappy frame, alum skid. drag skis and any other part i can get thats alum as well as i did some homework on picking track it woild take 188 studs to have 4 per row in each section of the track. that outta be a rocket haha shooting to have it done for later in the season grass drags maybeCabindweller wrote:I wonder if a JD 600 with the 18" wide track would get the power to the ground better?
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Jerry