1. You two quit arguing. 2. Bill, go find that chick who said your car is sexy and get laid. 3. What is the -exact- URL for the busty brit babes website? I'm a boob man -and- a brit babe man. Put the two together and I'm in heaven. That reminds me, Martin next time you come over you have to bring an extra for me. Oh BTW, I limped my car over to my welder guy to get the studs drilled out so I could get the wheel off. There wasn't much point doing it at my place anyway. He had better bits, a better drill. My disc was gouged and needed resurfacing. I needed his hydraulic press to get the old studs out and the new studs in. So....$100.00 later I'm back on the road with new brakes. I just need to do the rear ones. Thank God I checked the rear wheels. They'll come off just fine. Rich --- In DMCForum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "content22207" <brobertson@xxxx> wrote: > Will speak very slowly... > > In a high compression engine, low octane mixture will explode on its > own simply from heat & pressure. Even worse, is totally uncontrolled > combustion (engine designers build pistons & heads to spread flame in > particular pattern. Ever seen pistons with channels cast into them > that must point towards front of engine? And no, I'm not talking about > valve reliefs). Only two possibilities: reduce volatility of fuel by > increasing octane (1960's American premium grade was 97 octane), or > shoot spark sooner before mixture has a chance to explode on its own. > > This is pretty common knowledge among American racing crowd. Rather > than screwing around with multi valves, turbo chargers, etc, we take > the simple direct route: compress ever living mess out of mixture and > pump full of octane to hold it until spark hits. Go to any American > track -- 12:1 compression is the norm. And station outside the gate > sells 100 plus octane fuel from a special pump. > > Again, you and Darren can play with my 11:1 460 FOR A SHORT TIME > (don't want you ruining my valve train). I defy you to run it on 93 > octane timed at 10 degrees. No fair cheating with anything else in the > tank. > > BTW: running high octane fuel in a low compression engine is counter > productive. Mixture will not burn enough, leaving behind carbon that > ultimately hardens and becomes part of chambers. Undesireable because > carbon glows red hot, totally altering combustion characteristics, and > dieseling long after electricity removed from ignition. > > Bill Robertson > #5939 (9.5:1 compression thank you very much) > > >--- In DMCForum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, Martin Gutkowski <webmaster@xxxx> wrote: > > > > Content22207 wrote: > > > > >2) Advancing time moves spark closer to bottom of compression stroke > > >-- cuts power (but does give longer & cleaner burn. > > > > > Did you read the link I sent? > > > > Knocking is corrected by running less advance. If knocking is caused by > > the fuel igniting too soon during the compression stroke, why on earth > > would you be able to correct this by lighting it up even sooner?!! This > > is what you're suggesting. > > > > http://www.sdsefi.com/techcomb.htm > > > > Read it. > > > > This is my last word. If you want further conversation on this, you can > > mail Darren, but he'd put Jim to shame in an insult contest.... > > > > Martin Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ADVERTISEMENT <http://rd.yahoo.com/M=194081.4074964.5287182.1261774/D=egroupweb/S=170512 6215:HM/A=1732161/R=0/SIG=11p5b9ris/*http://www.ediets.com/start.cfm?code= 30509&media=atkins> click here <http://us.adserver.yahoo.com/l?M=194081.4074964.5287182.1261774/D=egroupm ail/S=:HM/A=1732161/rand=487626444> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: DMCForum-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service <http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/> .
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