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Within the last four years, some ETC manufacturers have developed their
own tire slip and ignition management circuitry to work inside an MSD
spark box or other ignition control. Racetronics and Tri-Mark build
theirs in separate ETC units that can be hidden in a race car if so
desired. The Tri-Mark main control box is 3.5 X 5 X 1-inch. Not exactly
tiny, but hideable from cursory tech inspection. Davis Technologies
has produced some impressively small ETC circuitry that integrates inside
a spark box. It's a convenient place to put it because plenty of critical
inputs are available: power, ground, an engine RPM signal, etc.
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ETC that is more current, but still
about three to four years old. The custom-built ETC circuitry by
Davis Technologies (right, next to 9-volt for scale only) could
be mounted inside an MSD ignition control and be tough to detect
on casual inspection of an open spark box. Note the ribbon-wire
connection to the circuit pack. |
I've seen the inside of plenty of stock MSD spark boxes used in racing,
and I've seen the inside of one implanted with Davis Technologies ETC
circuitry, and to be honest, a tech inspector would be very hard-pressed
to tell the difference between the two. A hacksaw would make the job
easier, but not too many racers are going to let tech inspectors hack
into an ignition control-especially a modified one.
Nevertheless, according to one ETC manufacturer, many new sales are
now of ETC units that are not integrated in an ignition control because
some tracks have basically gone to a "claimer rule" where they can randomly
take an ignition control, or they issue a racer one from the track.
The tracks are not going to spend the time policing for ETC, but racers
risk losing a relatively expensive ETC unit if their number is in the
claimer pool. Consequently, the move to making ETC that is portable,
or so small (see below) it can be taped into a wiring harness and look
only like a bulge in a wiring loom.
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Portable ETC unit (bottom) closer to
what's currently available for race teams, just bring your checkbook.
This one is not integrated into an ignition control, but its size
makes it easy to mount or carry. |
DOES ETC WORK?
When is ETC most effective? Any time you are racing at a track that
you apply and lift the throttle. When running at Talladega when most
of the race is WOT (wide-open throttle), it doesn't offer much of an
advantage. But as one crewchief noted after experimenting with ETC recently,
"We picked up three seconds on a road course."
ETC can improve fuel mileage because throttle transitions are electronically
damped. Tire wear/conservation can be improved because it can calm down
all the little tire slips that are going on during racing that wear
and heat up the tires-the electronics can react faster than a human
can.
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