1993 Penske PC-22
1993 Indianapolis 500 Winner
Driven By: Emerson Fittipaldi
Engine: Ilmor Chevy DOHC V8
Horsepower: 720 @ 11,000 RPM
Penske Racing's 9th Indianapolis 500 win.
The point is, Ilmor's design was successful because the displacement advantage greatly outweighed the less-than-anticipated RPM penalty. Traditional pushrod designs weren't anticipated by the rulemakers to run RPM this close to the cammers; thus, Ilmor took advantage of the loophole by designing a "pushrod" (in name only) engine that could rev much higher than the traditional pushrod engines and still take advantage of the greater displacement. The differentiation between the Ilmor pushrod engine and the other pushrod designs of the same displacement was the Ilmor's ability to rev higher for 500 miles.
The previous year's winning DOHC engine achieved peak horsepower at 11,000 RPM, not that much greater than the Ilmor's 9800 RPM. Again, from Penske's website:
Note the horsepower advantage of the larger 1994 Ilmor pushrod engine over the 1993 Ilmor "cammer".
Rusty
Last time I checked, at that kind of RPM, GAINING 1200rpm is ALOT! If you don't think that's a big deal, you sadly mistaken. Think about the laws of physics involved here! If it wasn't "that much greater than 9800" then why didn't they do it?
Ilmor's design was successful because the displacement advantage greatly outweighed the less-than-anticipated RPM penalty.
Founded by Mario Illien and the late Paul Morgan, in partnership with Roger Penske, Ilmor Engineering's first project was the all-conquering Chevrolet Indy V8 engine, which dominated IndyCar racing from 1986 through 1993. Setting new standards for light weight, high horsepower and reliability, the Chevy Indy V8 achieved unprecedented success in America's most technically demanding racing series.
Ilmor's most innovative IndyCar engine was the Mercedes-Benz 500i, developed in a top-secret 50-week program specifically for the 1994 Indy 500. The most powerful engine ever to race at Indy, the 500i totally dominated the month of May, with Penske driver Al Unser, Jr. taking the pole and winning the race in a breeze. Ilmor's Mercedes IC108 took the CART manufacturers' championship in 1997, while Helio Castroneves won the 2001 and 2002 Indy 500s with Ilmor-developed GM-power.
He said that he wants to see all the diesel V8's turn 7,000 RPMS. Yes 7,000 rpms, now in the sled pulling world sure, but on the street? Don't get me started on how much of an idiot this guy is.
I certainly wouldn't flame somebody because they choose to put an accessory on their truck! Well, not unless we are having a "hide it from the dealer discussion" anyway.
What I can't understand is the desire of truck manufacturers (most likely due to customer demand) to turn our trucks into race-cars. What's the point? If people want a 500 HP truck, why can't they just buy the Hemi and chip it or the current truck and chip it???
I got a diesel for the torque and the fuel economy. I am already getting considerably less mpg because people asked for a 325 HP truck. I hope Mr. Banks is wrong on this one.
why can't a diesel be a hot rod?