Temix & Detroit
Hey, ever tried tweaking a V8's cam timing to shave a second off a 0‑60? I'm curious how far you can push an engine before it just stalls.
You could probably gain a few tenths, not a full second, unless you’re willing to turn that engine into a lawn mower. Adjusting cam timing is a precise dance; crank it up too far and you’re chasing a stall, not a sweet spot. The math always points to diminishing returns before the throttle closes.
You’re right, it's a razor‑thin margin. Maybe the real trick is to let the driver handle the sweet spot instead of tweaking the gears. The car wants to run, not a math problem.
Sure, let the driver chase that sweet spot, but remember the engine still has to stay within a safe envelope—patterns win over intuition when you’re chasing consistency.
Yeah, don’t let the engine bite. Patterns keep the beast from breaking, just like a good safety harness for a kid on a bike. We'll tweak the timing until we hit that sweet spot, but never overheat it.
Sounds like a solid plan—tweak, test, repeat until the timing curve hits the sweet spot, then lock it in before the engine starts acting like a kid on a runaway bike.
Sounds good. Just keep the timing tight, lock it, and let the engine breathe. No more runaway bikes.
Fine, keep the timing tight, lock it, and let the engine breathe. No runaway bikes, just efficient power.