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Thanks cloud 96...8 yep, thats the kit.
968CS-outright Porsche Australia NSW Drivers Championship winning car 2011, 2012
968CS-Porsche NSW Drivers Championship class winning car 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
911 GT2 - "The Beast"
BMW M3 Individual - the perfect daily driver
Posts: 149
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Flash, I deeply deeply respect your experience. In this case mine differs drastically.
Running sans balance shaft belt and tracking with revs above approx 4000rpm, the engine definately is stronger, with not hint of doubt in my mind. I have very seriously tracked the car both ways. My engine internals are stock, with just the airbox mod, very special full race exhaust and the best of 5 or 6 chips made for me. All tested back to back on the dyno too. I also picked up approx 3km/h (GPS data) down the straight at my test track.
In fact once I noticed a really surprising hp pickup in a race, and was talking to my race crew as to what caused it afterwards, when the officials came in to tell me a belt, which turned out to be the balance shaft belt, was lying on the track. I didnt know. So, for me, running sans the balance shaft belt results in a faster engine, but it is rougher at lower revs and I also dont trust it to be ok longer term. I worry about other things breaking from the extra vibration. Not worth it to me as its not a hp focussed car.I even carry spare balance shaft belts with me to all events. (ie: the cars are very fast relative to their hp, so if you are not winning, just 'turn in to corners faster' is my attitude-968's hammer)
My 5 cents worth for cloud 96...8 on a car built and run with an unlimited budget to win.
968CS-outright Porsche Australia NSW Drivers Championship winning car 2011, 2012
968CS-Porsche NSW Drivers Championship class winning car 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
911 GT2 - "The Beast"
BMW M3 Individual - the perfect daily driver
(This post was last modified: 08-09-2012, 08:42 AM by
MC968CS.)