Subaru Enthusiasts Car Club of the Sierras  

Go Back   Subaru Enthusiasts Car Club of the Sierras > Car Enthusiast Forums > Technical Chat

Technical Chat Ask and answer technical car questions.

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 2006-11-08, 07:24 PM   #51
SFVette
n00b
 
Real Name: Lucas Kunze
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Reno
Posts: 21
 
Car: 00 2.5rs, Past toys 94 Camaro, 00 Vette
Class: STS
 
If the tires don't rub they're not big enough
Default

I know most are tired of talking about PAX but after searching the net I found out how to calculate PAX

"There are many factors but it starts in Chicago on the "Chicago mean PAX index". On this day, the planet alignment is recorded, then the average of the daily times of high-tide on lake michigan are figured out. Take these two numbers and add them together call it the "planetary" number.

Next you go down to the local tarot reader, and have them pick a number between 1 and 100. This is a G number. Next you get a bunch of old chicken bones and throw them up in the air so they land in a circle that is (3.14 x 10) cm wide in diameter. Of the bones that fall in the circle, the amount of bones that are pointing to "true north" is your next number called "The bones number".

The 2 final formulas are:

((last year's pax) / (Chicago mean PAX number)) - (planetary number * (bones number/G number)) = Stage 1 pax

((Stage 1 pax) * (the number of cones called in corner 1 on the south course at nationals(previous year))) / 100 = final pax for next season

Its rather complicated but REALLY fair"
SFVette is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2006-11-08, 08:43 PM   #52
tysonK
warehouse SECCS
 
tysonK's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: SoCal...
Posts: 6,253
 
Car: 04 Evo 99 Cadillac
Class: street de le mod
Default

oh
__________________
Anjali? Anjali?


tysonK is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2006-11-08, 09:28 PM   #53
Kevin M
EJ22T
 
Kevin M's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Reno
Posts: 9,445
 
Car: '93/'01 GF6, mostly red
Class: 19 FP
Default

What about Street Tire multiplier? Is it the ratio of the air speed velocity of an African Swallow vs. a European Swallow?
__________________
FWD is the new AWD
Kevin M is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2006-11-09, 12:37 PM   #54
A1337STI
EJ205
 
A1337STI's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Reno, NV
Posts: 1,840
 
Car: Impreza and an Impreza
Class: AS / CRS PerfStock
 
"pedal on the right"
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by MattR
The engines don't care what altitude they are run at - it only cares what the air pressure, temperature and humidity is. Sea level at 30.15 inches baro is exactly the same as 4500 ft at 30.15inches, (Which is exactly where the Barometer sits for Reno and Oakland, Ca today!) as far as the engine is concerned. . To me, an altitude adjustment is just as necessary as a temperature and humidity adjustment
Actually the barometers are adjusted for altitude so 30.15 on the baro up here is not 30.15 on the baro in SF. if you look at weather station at mt rose vs SF they are always very very close, yet the real air pressure isn't that close.

But i agree with the rest of what you said. PAX is set and if you get to drive in 10F or 110F that's what you get. you don't get a Rain/Wind/Temp modifier so why altitude ?
__________________
Fighting uphill battles, one bullet at a time!


A1337STI is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2006-11-09, 06:43 PM   #55
knucklesplitter
EJ205
 
Real Name: Matt Taylor
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Cousin-F*ck, Carolina
Posts: 1,474
 
Wish in one hand and sh*t in the other...
Question

Yeah, there is more than a 2psi (about 4in.Hg) change in ambient pressure (compared to 14.7psi ) from sea level to 4500'.

Can somebody direct me to an explanation of this assertion that turbo'd engines only lose 5% compared to NA's 20%? I don't buy it, especially if the turbo car is not specifically tuned for the higher elevation. I bet there is an advantage, but not that much. I'm open to learning something though, so...

Last edited by knucklesplitter; 2006-11-09 at 06:45 PM.
knucklesplitter is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2006-11-09, 08:49 PM   #56
MattR
El Matador
 
MattR's Avatar
 
Real Name: Matt
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Reno, NV
Posts: 10,660
 
Car: 2012 Toyota Tacoma
Class: ?
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by A1337STI
Actually the barometers are adjusted for altitude so 30.15 on the baro up here is not 30.15 on the baro in SF. if you look at weather station at mt rose vs SF they are always very very close, yet the real air pressure isn't that close.

But i agree with the rest of what you said. PAX is set and if you get to drive in 10F or 110F that's what you get. you don't get a Rain/Wind/Temp modifier so why altitude ?

That's good to know, I wasn't entiely sure, mostly confused actually...he
__________________
"Dallas..We have a problem.”
MattR is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2006-11-10, 08:53 AM   #57
Tahoe C5
EJ22
 
Tahoe C5's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Lake Tahoe
Posts: 175
 
Car: 05 Legacy GT, 81 RX7
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by SFVette
I know most are tired of talking about PAX but after searching the net I found out how to calculate PAX

"There are many factors but it starts in Chicago on the "Chicago mean PAX index". On this day, the planet alignment is recorded, then the average of the daily times of high-tide on lake michigan are figured out. Take these two numbers and add them together call it the "planetary" number.

Next you go down to the local tarot reader, and have them pick a number between 1 and 100. This is a G number. Next you get a bunch of old chicken bones and throw them up in the air so they land in a circle that is (3.14 x 10) cm wide in diameter. Of the bones that fall in the circle, the amount of bones that are pointing to "true north" is your next number called "The bones number".

The 2 final formulas are:

((last year's pax) / (Chicago mean PAX number)) - (planetary number * (bones number/G number)) = Stage 1 pax

((Stage 1 pax) * (the number of cones called in corner 1 on the south course at nationals(previous year))) / 100 = final pax for next season

Its rather complicated but REALLY fair"
Wouldn't the phase of the moon effect the tidal surge on Lake Michagen differently every year? It seems that this might be the n/a vs. turbo factor that has been discussed ? Otherwise evrything else makes perfect sense. Thanks for the concise and accurate research and explanation
Tahoe C5 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
John's Nationals PAX article comments Dean Motorsports Chat 16 2006-11-29 03:51 PM
2006 PAX factors MattR Motorsports Chat 29 2006-03-28 05:59 PM
Boost Guage at high altitude A1337STI Technical Chat 17 2006-03-17 09:30 AM
Jan Reno SCCA meeting results dknv Motorsports Chat 13 2006-01-05 03:41 PM
High Octane Fuel Requirement LetItRev General Subaru Discussion & Club Chat 5 2003-11-04 08:30 AM


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 11:48 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
All Content Copyright Subaru Enthusiasts Car Club of the Sierras unless otherwise noted.