Greg,
What I want you to do is admit you were wrong. You came out gangbusters claiming something wasn't true. You throw categorical generalizations around then recant. With no data, you ask US to disprove YOUR statement. With a reasonable effort, I did. Then you want to ignore the numbers I provide and go by your gut feel. It's a joke really.
(I see no reason why, for the sake of arguement, you can't take real data from an MX-5 and apply it to the M1 Miata...unless it doesn't work for your arguement. If the new Miata goes from .38 to .37 with the hardtop on, I would love to know how the M1 gets any more benefit. No, it's not the exact data you were looking for but it's CERTAINLY close enough to prove that your NX has a significantly lower CD than the Miata with a hardtop. I think you probably knew no data existed for an M1 with a hardtop when you asked for it, making it impossible to disprove the statement you made with no data to back it up)
Doing my best to avoid the original debate? Are you serious? I post TOO much. I explain everything. The only one avoiding questions is you. Maybe the entire post #29.
If you want to seperate the 94/95 from the 96/97, so be it but lets not claim the 94/95 didn't go through the Process, it did - just like the NX2000.
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So Andy, What year is your car and what system are you running? Second you have not addressed the fact that you guys have created a model based on info provided here?
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I know that, Andy; that's what this is all about for you. It really has virtually nothing to do with the technical arguments at hand.What I want you to do is admit you were wrong.[/b]
I understand that, Andy, which is exactly why it's like pissing against a wall having a technical argument with you.I see no reason why, for the sake of arguement, you can't take real data from an MX-5 and apply it to the M1 Miata...[/b]
Woa Jeff, That is not what I am saying and lets be clear I believe Andy has enough integrity that even given a rule to do so he would not cheat the spirit of the IT rules. The issue is that by combining the cars. The early car was used for the process, The late car was assed at that weight making 5 more HP. My guess is the 5 HP has more to do with the compression bump than the ECU. Now under the update back date rule the OBD1 car get the compression bump and runs at the lighter weight. Now we have given a compression bump to a car that was used to class the car using the process. The process needs to be re-run on the early after the compression bump and my money says the weight goes up. Again I don't care what car it is. If Amy's NX got a compression bump from an error in the manualof VTS then I would expect the ITAC to re-run Amy's car also.There are some valid points being thrown out here by Greg and Joe, but great Hay-Soos! Does anyone think that Andy is really trying to stack the deck in favor of a car he drives?
All I have ever seen Andy do is devote a boatload of time to making IT better; just don't buy that this is some inside job to help the Miatas.
I suspect that a LOT of cars had some fudge factor applied to them, and we are focusing on the ITA Miatas because we have an ITAC member who drives one. I also suspect the magnitude of the fudge factor is no greater than that on the other cars.
That is specualtion; I have no concrete examples.
I will say this though -- my experience in SMs is that aero is POOR. Most ITB cars seemed significantly faster at the end of the long straight at VIR than our SMs. Just a "gut" feeling though, no data to back it up.
On the flip side, Greg is correct that the Miata CLEARLY is better than the sum of its parts. I know we hate referring back to on track data, but the times that SMs run at 115 to 120 whp are nothing short of incredible.
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The 94-95 had a lower compression ratio than the 96-97? [/b]
or will argue it's validity (GA) to the end. Simple politics, a la debate club in school. I get my feathers ruffled when I think about how my 2600# (originally 2675) pound 135hp "monster" is classed with parity, especially when compared to the 2600# e36 318is, and the 2480# 140 hp miata. It's the gliches in the system that upset people. Besides AB's a big boy, he's smart, and he's winning...he expects this and can take it. Anyone on this BB would gladly trade for his "problems". Joe - the specified compression ratio did not change. The actual factory compression ratio did. It is common, VW is a prime example, for the actual CR on a new car to be below the specified number. What I am reading here is that Mazda simply made the actual match their spec with an updated piston.
What does this mean? Well both cars can run a 9.5:1 motor. However one of them is gaining more than .5, and a hair more power than the other. In the end they both have the same power potential since they have the same intake, valves, bore, stroke, compression, and ability to run any ecu programming.
Using the higher compression piston does not increase the maximum allowable CR. Also, I don't know this, but it may be a superceded factory replacement at this point (I don't care what Mazda ships you in a crate motor, what do they sell you at the parts counter zoomers?), in which case the point is even more moot.
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No. They were both listed at 9.0:1. The early (pre Feb 1994) 94 car was rumored to have a softer set-up @ 8.8:1. When the specs came out in 1995 and they had the 'current' pistons, the hp rating stayed at 128hp. The published CR was 9.0:1 for the entire life of the M1 1.8 (94-97). The HP bump didn't come until the OBD-1 to OBD-II swap.
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On the flip side, Greg is correct that the Miata CLEARLY is better than the sum of its parts. I know we hate referring back to on track data, but the times that SMs run at 115 to 120 whp are nothing short of incredible.
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Ipress I think your missing the points. I personally don't care what AB or GA's cars weigh or how much HP they make. GOOD FOR THEM!!! The only thing that I (we) care about is parity amongst the field. The problem is that once something is on paper the reversal of it is nearly impossible, or is soo expensive to prove that it's simply not worth it. The Miata thing is already written, therefore some will defend it to the end (Aor will argue it's validity (GA) to the end. Simple politics, a la debate club in school. I get my feathers ruffled when I think about how my 2600# (originally 2675) pound 135hp "monster" is classed with parity, especially when compared to the 2600# e36 318is, and the 2480# 140 hp miata. It's the gliches in the system that upset people. Besides AB's a big boy, he's smart, and he's winning...he expects this and can take it. Anyone on this BB would gladly trade for his "problems".
R [/b]
Rob, I hear you, but keep a candle burning for other cars too. Some run ITA at about 2300 with 125 Whp and 105 ft lbs of tq.
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Marty, you know as well as anyone that there are a TON of mechanical differences that make up that 16hp. Intake, AFM/MAF, compression bump, injectors, etc.
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finally....someone not drinking the kool-aid of miata fear.
to the best of my knowledge, if you buy pistons from mazda, you get the same piston you'd get in a crate, the same piston that came in any 1995 and up car produced post 3/95.
well, actually it came after, as some of the later run of 95s actually had OBDII and the updated pistons. but it didn't make a damn bit of difference, as the SM crowd has proven, or else that small window in time of miata production would be selling for huge premiums.
more like 120-125 to be perfectly proper.....and in the draft pushing each other.
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Starting with the 3/95 start of the ODB-II implementation (VIN 14193) the pistons were changed with a slight dome to increase the compression ratio to an actual 9.0:1. The '94-3/95 pistons were factory rated at 9.0:1 but actually was around 8.8.[/b]
Travis, You dont have to be a dick....I don't hate Miata's I hate rules that are not consistently applied....Stuff your mazda hate shit right in your ass....Your own posting says there is a difference in compression....
It is really not a problem and I am done posting on this thread. I will follow the process to get this car relooked at by the CRB. You guys go ahead and have at it from here. But to try to convinc anyone that the process applied at 128 is fairly reapplied to 133 iss full of crap.
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