
Alfa Romeo 8C 2900B MM Le Mans, mystery points
#1
Posted 08 December 2014 - 19:40
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#2
Posted 08 December 2014 - 20:03
I once read that when calculating speed from RPM, final drive ratio and tyre size, you have to allow for the tyres 'growing' from centrifugal force. This may explain the discrepancy.
#3
Posted 09 December 2014 - 05:52
D'
You are correct that tyres grow with cenrifugal force and you are also correct that you must take into account the tyre rolling radius/diameter when calculating RPM/speeds.
However from reading the above the discrepancy is 149 mph at 5500 rpm versus 137 mph at 5700 rpm. For these numbers to occur that the tyres would have needed to grow 12.7%. This would result in the 600 by 19 becoming the equivalent size to 800 by 19s.
Now none of us are experts on 1938 era tryes but that much growth is quite out of the question. A 3% growth possible; 12.7%, quite out of the realm of possibilties. There has to be better answer to the quoted discrpancy.
Regards
#4
Posted 09 December 2014 - 23:03
How accurate were 1938 rev counters?
#5
Posted 10 December 2014 - 01:38
It is clearly impossible to vouch for the accuracy of any tacho decades after the event. However, I have 1950s experience with several 1930s tachos and can vouch for their accuracy includng one fitted on in 1934 Le mans Aston. Besides, tacho error can hardly explain the discrepancy raised by Cavard in post one. The tach would have to be 700 rpm in error to be the cause. Hardly likely on an ex-Le Mans car which with that kind of error would likely have either resulted in a blow up or being badly off the pace. The techntians of the day were far better than that.
I have checked Carvac's calculations with my own programme and his RPM/MPH/gear ratio calculations are spot on assuming a 1.0 tyre aspect ratio. I do know the source of his data nor do I know of the Alfa's race history other than Le Mans. But I can offer a more likely expnantion from my own experience.
I once owned the 1955 Lotus raced by Chapman at Le Mans in 1955. The car was leading the Index of Performance class when the French found an excuse to disqualify it. The car went on to race every major English race in 1955 before going to Doc Wylie and then myself shortly after. I inherited the entire Le mans kit. Included therein were four gear sets from 3.87 to 4.55 to 1. I can well believe that the 3.87 gears were in the dif for the long race.
The Lotus went on to race widely in the US and Oz. In the US it ran at Watkins Glen to Sebring to Road America and most places in between. In Oz it ran primarily at Warwick Farm and Oran Park while setting an U2L lap record at the latter. No where at any of these were the longer gear set used. The 4.22 and 4.55 were the most prevalently used. If I had taken it to Bathurst I would have used either the 4.11 or 4.22. The longest ratio was most unsuitable for competition other than at Le mans.
So It is quite in the realm of my experience that the Alfa ran a 13/50 at Le Mans and ran a 12/50 most elsewhere and the ratio change was un-recorded. It is also possible that the Alfa never reached 149 mph. My far more streamlined Lotus would not exceed 132.
Regards