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hehe chucks his flamesuit on

i agree about the one with the most money wins, but as you asked rb20lagwagon revs vs power low down i'll have to say the car with more power down low but the ability to keep that power going as ya get higher :D hehehe

Rb25's a nutshell? i think not :P

adrian :(

It depends on the race and the cars set up.

I hate my RB20, It revs to8300 has heaps of power but below

5000rpm Nannas Magna is faster so in day to day traffic its a dog

but a Wannerro its a lot of fun.

RB20s have a very short stroke and much less torque than 2.0L 4 cylinder motors like SR20s thats why i'm building an RB31DETT

stroker for my GTS-X. No RB20 is going to be a match on the track or strip for a motor like this, Nissan would have used RB20s in GTRs if they were the go.Don't get me Wrong 20s are still a good motor but there is always something better.

Thanks for the cheque. Hope it's enough:)

I think maybe top end power for drags and low down for racing (on circuits without long straights)

Years ago when I mistakenly left Nissan for a Mazda Rallycar my sponsor built a periphial port 13B engine for me. I had the option of big ports like everyone else or small. I went for small and that engine kicked butt and whipped all the works cars up the Zig Zag in Kalamunda in a national rally (grandfather of Rally Australia). The car just leapt out of corners while others were waiting for the revs to rise.

Unfortunately the car was a pig to handle (ask Ken :D )

But the engine was magic

Cheers

Lag Wagon. :D

The answer to the question you didn't ask ...

Is cubes .....

End of the day, engines aside, more cubes will always win, when "everything is equal"

More low down, more top end, more everything.

The only reason we have these Rb20 v rb25 debates is that everything is not equal and we have to deal with how engines are built. Rather than having every engine well engineered.

The only draw back that cubes has when technology is equal, is the basic weight of the engine itself. This will affect size of car and weight placement. Probably most important in a track/circuit/rally cars where handling is as important than power. Drags , very little difference, extra power will overcome.

I wouldn't have said cubes, coz the Formula 1/Indy cars are only 3litres from memory, but they rev out to 16,000rpm or something crazy like that!!!

I would have said low down for street and rev's for racing, but it does depend on type of racing... If something with tight turns and lots of them, then low down would be better...

Just my thoughts on the matter...

If you look at the street-drags in japan, the fastest GTRs at each meet are not the ones with the biggest turbos, theyre the ones with the "smaller" turbos that belt off the line. It always makes me wonder why anyone would use a T88.

Im not sure what the jap tuning houses use for the 1000m runs, but Id be interested to find out.

Lets face it most of us are daily drivers, none of us (bar ken :D ) are rich enough to own daily driven cars and race cars :P So for most people it would low down response with small turbo's producing power from low revs. Sure if your building a drag car you'd go for the biggest turbo you could fit under the bonnet thats ultra laggy but produces huge HP, cos you'd never drive it day to day on the street cos it would be a dog and when it did spool it would be dangerous :(

thanks for that rob...

personally i think the RB20 is a great little engine BUT put a decent size turbo on it and it dies in the ass. its horrible around the street and an automatic v6 commodore is quicker off the line. you do learnt to adapt your driving style to stay within the power band but its the main reason why i changed my turbo to a smaller unit.

i think its a matter of balancing both things out, low down power is good, but useless if u have no top end to keep on going. but as many have said around the street you can beat low rpm power

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