8/8/03
Ed.
Note: Wady Hamam or Pro Mod
Wad as he is known in the sport as
drag racing's main nitrous Guru. He
has been involved in nitrous oxide
injection almost from its inception
especially with the Pro Mod division..
He is originally from the Buffalo,
New York area and has been involved
in all types of racing from flat track
motorcycles to fuel dragsters. In
his wasted youth he even raced a fuel
funny car powered by a blown and injected
small block Ford! He and his brother
campaigned a front motored Top Fuel
dragster and lost a race against Don
Garlits at the now closed Niagara
Falls Dragway. His advice about nitrous
problems is highly sought after but
he is hard to get to. He has agreed
to answer one question every couple
of weeks for Drag Racing Online readers.
Email your questions to: promodwad@dragracingonline.com,
and he will answer the question he
finds most intriguing.
(Original caricature Pete Millar) |
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Wady,
Could you PLEASE help me? I run the annular nozzle, single stage Fogger in the NMCA racing series. We run a .049 nitrous / .043 fuel jet with 10 lbs. flowing out of a .121 flow jet.
Any suggestions on this tune-up so we may go faster would be greatly appreciated. We currently run on 10.5 tires at 3030 lbs. with a glide. We're running 7.76 at 175 mph.
John
John,
What you are telling me is you
run a very rich fuel tune-up so you must be
also running lots of timing. Both the nitrous
and the timing are trying to create detonation,
but the tune-up is so wet that you are probably
not causing any engine damage.
My suggestion to you (without
knowing all the facts) is to get the fuel pressure
down into the six pound area through a .72 to
.74 Holley jet and get timing back down to where
the engine can really use the nitrous.
The annular nozzle has a tendency
to pull fuel from the end of the nozzle due
to the nitrous flow and that makes the tune-up
even richer, so you will not have to worry about
hurting anything in that pressure range. You
will need to check spark plugs for color and
heat to help you get the ultimate tune, but
I feel you will see a definite performance increase
as the engine will not be getting overloaded
with fuel on the big end of the run.
Once you have determined what
you like in the jetting map you mentioned, you
can then start to tune with jet changes for
even more performance gains.
Wady Hamam
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