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PostPosted: Fri Mar 18, 2005 21:05 
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stackmonkey wrote:
Well, if you know of any other car that can do 250mph for less money.. :D


I am sure it could be built, try the Kit car scene.

Dax rush 2.0 Turbo 4x4: 0 to 60 mph in 3.15 sec

I have yet to see any other road vehicle equal that acceleration, which is pulling over 2 G

0 to 100 back to 0 in 12.02 sec

Built for far less than £20,000

Have my own performance rush, would not consider putting at top speed on the road :!:

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 18, 2005 21:31 
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bmwk12 wrote:
I have yet to see any other road vehicle equal that acceleration, which is pulling over 2 G

You have obviously led a very sheltered life, come & make yourself comfortable on the back of my bike and I'll be more than happy to show you acceleration.

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0 to 100 back to 0 in 12.02 sec

Never felt the need to accelerate hard and then slam the anchors on immediately afterwards, but I can do the standing quarter in 9.05 @ 152mph with a 0.34 second reaction time

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Built for far less than £20,000

Built for £2,500

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 18, 2005 21:51 
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You have obviously led a very sheltered life, come & make yourself comfortable on the back of my bike and I'll be more than happy to show you acceleration.


Hyabusa 0 to 60 in 3.15, which really shows you how quick the dax really is. The dax is the fastest recorded UK road legal car!

Or was last time i looked

I really was talking about cars!

However my point was that the vehicle concerning this thread was over priced on reflection of performance.

So top end of your £2,500 machine :?:

btw, what vehicle or bike do you have!

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 18, 2005 23:25 
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bmwk12 wrote:
Dax rush 2.0 Turbo 4x4: 0 to 60 mph in 3.15 sec

I have yet to see any other road vehicle equal that acceleration, which is pulling over 2 G


Nope. 0 to 60 in 3.15 seconds is an average acceleration of about 0.87g

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 00:13 
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SafeSpeed wrote:
bmwk12 wrote:
Dax rush 2.0 Turbo 4x4: 0 to 60 mph in 3.15 sec

I have yet to see any other road vehicle equal that acceleration, which is pulling over 2 G


Nope. 0 to 60 in 3.15 seconds is an average acceleration of about 0.87g


:?: That's not right is it? Sitting stationary in this chair I'm experiencing 1g. Do you mean 1.87g?


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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 00:24 
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Rigpig wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
0 to 60 in 3.15 seconds is an average acceleration of about 0.87g


:?: That's not right is it? Sitting stationary in this chair I'm experiencing 1g. Do you mean 1.87g?


Are you accelerating? F=ma

If we lifted you and your chair up to 120 feet above ground and suddenly removed the chair, 2.7 seconds later you would hit the ground at 60mph. That's acceleration! :)

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 00:28 
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SafeSpeed wrote:
bmwk12 wrote:
Dax rush 2.0 Turbo 4x4: 0 to 60 mph in 3.15 sec

I have yet to see any other road vehicle equal that acceleration, which is pulling over 2 G


Nope. 0 to 60 in 3.15 seconds is an average acceleration of about 0.87g

I must admit, I was wondering what sort of fancy tyres could provide enough grip for 2g+!

Even F1 cars can only attain brief peaks of about 3g, and that's with tyres that wear out in 200 miles stuck to the ground by wings that treble the effective weight of the car!

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 09:32 
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SafeSpeed wrote:
Rigpig wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
0 to 60 in 3.15 seconds is an average acceleration of about 0.87g


:?: That's not right is it? Sitting stationary in this chair I'm experiencing 1g. Do you mean 1.87g?


Are you accelerating? F=ma

If we lifted you and your chair up to 120 feet above ground and suddenly removed the chair, 2.7 seconds later you would hit the ground at 60mph. That's acceleration! :)


Depends whether we are talking relative or absolute I suppose.
In absolute terms my statement was quite correct, everyone on planet earth is experiencing 1g, it is a recognised datum. Aircraft accelerometers sit with the needle pointing to 1g when they are stationary on the ground, a 0.87g reading would mean -0.13g in relative terms.


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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 11:57 
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Rigpig wrote:
Depends whether we are talking relative or absolute I suppose.
In absolute terms my statement was quite correct, everyone on planet earth is experiencing 1g, it is a recognised datum. Aircraft accelerometers sit with the needle pointing to 1g when they are stationary on the ground, a 0.87g reading would mean -0.13g in relative terms.

Isn't this to do with where the force is felt? I'd have thought aircraft produce g force vertically from the point of view of any occupants, as does gravity. Surely in vehicles g is normally going to be lateral - from the front when braking, either side when cornering and from behind when accelerating - so that 0.87g isn't in addition to the normally 1g from gravity as it's coming from a different direction. I vaguely recall a piece on the F1 coverage a few years back when one or two fighter pilots got a ride in the two seat Minardi (I think) and returned the favour by taking the driver(s) up in the plane. There were comments afterwards that the pilots weren't used to g coming sideways and vice versa.

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 12:31 
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Rigpig wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
Rigpig wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
0 to 60 in 3.15 seconds is an average acceleration of about 0.87g


:?: That's not right is it? Sitting stationary in this chair I'm experiencing 1g. Do you mean 1.87g?


Are you accelerating? F=ma

If we lifted you and your chair up to 120 feet above ground and suddenly removed the chair, 2.7 seconds later you would hit the ground at 60mph. That's acceleration! :)


Depends whether we are talking relative or absolute I suppose.
In absolute terms my statement was quite correct, everyone on planet earth is experiencing 1g, it is a recognised datum. Aircraft accelerometers sit with the needle pointing to 1g when they are stationary on the ground, a 0.87g reading would mean -0.13g in relative terms.



No no no! Gravity is a FORCE which causes unrestrained objects to ACCELERATE at 32ft per second per second. We just happen to frequently use 'g' as a unit of acceleration. In a vehicle accelerating horizontally at 1.0g the occupants experience two forces - the force of the acceleration acting horizontally throught the seat backrest and the force of gravity acting through the seat base. Both these forces are vector forces and they add to give a net force vector (remember Pythagoras) of root 2 or 1.414g acting downwards and backwards at 45 degrees.

However, we can also observe the VEHICLE accelerating horozontally at 32ft/s/s and can usefully (but potentially confusingly) term that acceleration 1.0g.

If aircraft accelerometers show 1g when static, then clearly there's a strange convention goiing on, because there is NO ACCELERATION!

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 12:40 
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SafeSpeed wrote:
If aircraft accelerometers show 1g when static, then clearly there's a strange convention goiing on, because there is NO ACCELERATION!

It's quite a useful datum actually, as it allows 0g to indicate weightlessness, ie when the plane is ballistic.

When a plane is flying straight and level, 1g is correct, as that is the force being applied to the wings to support it. 0g means it is free falling, -1g means a negative force is being applied to the wings to make it accelerate downwards into a dive.

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 12:47 
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JT wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
If aircraft accelerometers show 1g when static, then clearly there's a strange convention goiing on, because there is NO ACCELERATION!

It's quite a useful datum actually, as it allows 0g to indicate weightlessness, ie when the plane is ballistic.

When a plane is flying straight and level, 1g is correct, as that is the force being applied to the wings to support it. 0g means it is free falling, -1g means a negative force is being applied to the wings to make it accelerate downwards into a dive.


Understood. But on that basis, the instruments are not reading acceleration are they? They are reading force. How are these instruments labelled?

I can see how a mass suspended in the plane by six spring balances would give the result.

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 12:52 
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Derick wrote:
The worlds Most Expensive & fastest Car - The Bugatti Veyron will be let loose on the streets later this year. Whether we will see them in the Uk remains to be seen. Its faster than a F1 Car at 250mph :) Cost- A cool £750,000 :shock: Engine-an 8 ltr 1001bhp 8-) Wow!!

Will the Police Be Able to keep Up?

If you haven't seen it look here -
http://www.webwombat.com.au/motoring/news_reports/bugatti1.htm


But it it only does 13 mpg - would cost a fortune to fill up as well...

We'd soon catch it :lol: It would run out of fuel before we do! :lol:

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 13:02 
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Gatsobait wrote:
Rigpig wrote:
Depends whether we are talking relative or absolute I suppose.
In absolute terms my statement was quite correct, everyone on planet earth is experiencing 1g, it is a recognised datum. Aircraft accelerometers sit with the needle pointing to 1g when they are stationary on the ground, a 0.87g reading would mean -0.13g in relative terms.

Isn't this to do with where the force is felt? I'd have thought aircraft produce g force vertically from the point of view of any occupants, as does gravity. Surely in vehicles g is normally going to be lateral - from the front when braking, either side when cornering and from behind when accelerating - so that 0.87g isn't in addition to the normally 1g from gravity as it's coming from a different direction. I vaguely recall a piece on the F1 coverage a few years back when one or two fighter pilots got a ride in the two seat Minardi (I think) and returned the favour by taking the driver(s) up in the plane. There were comments afterwards that the pilots weren't used to g coming sideways and vice versa.


You're right, acceleration is a vector quantity, it has both magnitude and direction. In the case of gravity that's 9.81 m/s2 (22.3 mph per second for us petrolheads - 0-60 in 2.8 seconds :)) and the direction is straight down. But when we are stationary on the ground we aren't actually accelerating, because although there is a downwards force on us (F=ma as Paul said) there's an equal force pushing up on us from the ground (Newton's third law). The force only generates acceleration if it's unopposed.

It's normally only pilots who need to worry about acceleration in the vertical direction, so when we're talking about cars we tend to forget about it. But in a car accelerating forward, then technically, the force on the driver is the combination of the downwards force generated by gravity and the forwards force generated by the car engine. You have to get your calculator out and do trigonometry to calculate it properly.

Because in a fighter jet you turn at high speed by banking the plane and then pulling the stick back, fighter pilots experience most of their g straight down through the seat, except on takeoff. Typically 4g in a turn but it could be up to 8g, hence the need for inflatable trousers to stop the pilot blacking out due to a rush of blood from head to feet.

But F1 drivers experience all their g in the horizontal plane - about 1.5g accelerating, 2.5g braking and 4g going round corners, if I remember correctly. If they weren't strapped in so tightly they become part of the car, they'd be thrown around like rag dolls!


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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 15:30 
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Nope. 0 to 60 in 3.15 seconds is an average acceleration of about 0.87g


Have the details on the fact sheet from the speed record test, if you would like to email your fax no. i supply the fact sheet

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 15:32 
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I must admit, I was wondering what sort of fancy tyres could provide enough grip for 2g+!


Rush is 4x4, Rear tyres 10" wide, Front 8" wide

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 15:44 
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bmwk12 wrote:
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Nope. 0 to 60 in 3.15 seconds is an average acceleration of about 0.87g


Have the details on the fact sheet from the speed record test, if you would like to email your fax no. i supply the fact sheet


Fax is 01862 832002

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 15:50 
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This instrument is similar to that fitted to the Harrier GR3 on which I used to work.
It is in its rest position, i.e. the aircraft is on the ground - or would be if it were fitted to one before any smart-ass comments appear :wink:
1g is the accepted standard force felt by every stationary object on planet earth.

Gatsobait wrote:
I'd have thought aircraft produce g force vertically from the point of view of any occupants, as does gravity. Surely in vehicles g is normally going to be lateral - from the front when braking, either side when cornering and from behind when accelerating


Correct, the forces acting on an aircraft are usually said to act through the C of G - some accelerometers and 'G' meters have a remote sensor palced right on the C of G to get the most accurate reading. Nonetheless, the direction of the force is irrelevant, 1g is the datum.

I thank you... :lol:


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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 16:47 
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Nope. 0 to 60 in 3.15 seconds is an average acceleration of about 0.87g


That is based on a vehicle acceleration at the same rate throughout, which i do not believe is how a car accelerates.

Each gear will accelerate the vehicle at a differant speed, hence the G would also be differant through out acceleration.

The average is always lower than the highest G actually achieved, is it not :?:

Thanks for your fax, i get it over Monday Morning, when i am back in the office. It makes interesting reading for a Kit Car.

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 19, 2005 16:53 
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Never felt the need to accelerate hard and then slam the anchors on immediately afterwards


0 to 100 was achieved in 7.62 sec

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