Just your average 7 sec grocery getter....

Kerry & Kathy

Member #007
Paid Member
Location
Fredericktown, Farmington and Viburnum MO
First Name
Kerry
Last Name
Owen
Well...they finally did it.
7.97.....!!!

First 7 sec full-bodied street driven Mustang Coyote automatic.

Note..the parachute and roll cage are required by track rules due to how quick and fast the car runs.
The car is registered and street driven in Florida...

Knowing personally how hard it can be to run sub 8.50 sec 160+ mph times in the quarter...IMHO this car is simply amazing...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tZSzbqWQl_c&feature=youtu.be
 
Pretty impressive. He would never win a hole shot or burnout competition though :-D
 
Pretty impressive. He would never win a hole shot or burnout competition though :-D

Oh contraire...!
A 1.204 sec 60 ft time is quicker than many professional class drag bikes. When Bobby Baker ran 207 mph in the 1/4 on his Funnybike with a 12" wide slick...his 60 ft time was 1.09 sec.

But,...I will agree with you re: any burnout "competition"...which is all for show.
The key to a quick time is avoiding the tires breaking loose. Once the tires break traction they freewheel resulting in a much slower ET... and they will never recover until you back out of the throttle...killing your ET.
A lot of time, tuning and engineering went into this chassis to keep the tires planted throughout the pass.
 
Curious why the delay on the tree? Reaction time I guess want important?
 
Curious why the delay on the tree? Reaction time I guess want important?

He is running for a record with no competitor in the other lane. So....yes. Reaction time is of no importance.
It is common on such passes to wait...no longer focusing on the tree...and only concentrate on the pass.

The pass where he nearly hit the wall was one where his throttle blade stuck...wide open.
It is amazing that he spun and yet did not hit the wall. Explains why the "diaper" comment was so appropriate.

To put this street cars performance in perspective...
Grumpy Jenkins won the very first Pro Stock final in 1970 going 9.90's @139 mph with a 331 cu in Small Block Chevy engine and 4 spd manual transmission running 105 Octane racing gas.

Here we have a street licensed, street driven, full-bodied 3700 lb 317 cu in computer controlled Coyote Mustang with a factory computer controlled 6-speed transmission going high 7's at 174 mph on E-85 pump gas.
Two second quicker and 35 mph faster in 1320 ft.
For me...that is impressive performance....and is a testament to the HP capacity of the 6R80 transmission.
 
What do you think about longevity? Think the Auto will hold up as long as the manual?
 
What do you think about longevity? Think the Auto will hold up as long as the manual?
The MT82 six-speed manual transmissions have been a weak point from day one. Many Coyote Mustang owners are on their second transmission under warranty. The 2018 MT82's are supposed to be better.

But the 6R80's clearly are more reliable and can handle more HP in stock form. In modified form, they have handled 1200+ HP.
 
Years ago, I used to drag race a 70 Dodge Challenger. Had two of them, one a 383 four speed and the other a 340 Six Pack A727 Automatic. As much as my ego disliked it, I found the Automatic car was a full second faster, and the difference came after the 60' mark even though the bigger engine delivered 45 more HP. It's all in the shifting and keeping power applied at the right point.
 
Years ago, I used to drag race a 70 Dodge Challenger. Had two of them, one a 383 four speed and the other a 340 Six Pack A727 Automatic. As much as my ego disliked it, I found the Automatic car was a full second faster, and the difference came after the 60' mark even though the bigger engine delivered 45 more HP. It's all in the shifting and keeping power applied at the right point.

Your experience is not unique.

Many egos have been bruised by those who thought they could be quicker and faster with a manual trans.
And the attitude was supported by the fact that, in the past, the general rule of thumb was that an automatic would sap 15-18 % of the engines HP due to parasitic losses.

However with improved converter technology, lock up clutches with carbon fiber discs, programmable electronic shift solenoids, and computer management... the automatics have reduced those losses dramatically with today's transmissions.
Perhaps most importantly, the introduction of 6-10 speed automatics have allowed the engines to remain closer to the torque peak when shifting with far less rpm drop.
This allows them to stay in their ideal power band longer and recover more quickly when shifted.

Today...particularly in a straight line...the automatics are clearly quicker and in many cases faster even though there remains some efficiency loss at the converter.

Even traditional road racing where manuals have traditionally been superior is being challenged by new automatic technology with lockup converters and electronic paddle shifters allowing programmable upshift and downshifts where the engines braking energy can be managed electronically to avoid shock loading the tires while effectively decelerating the car.

The ability to drive quickly is being transferred from the driver...to the programmer... in conjunction with real-time sensors.

Some manual advocates would argue that the manuals are more fun to drive. In most cases today...they are right.
However programmable paddle shifters will still retain the control that most drivers enjoy.
Instead of a manual, mechanical connection to the transfer of power to the ground, it will be an electronic programmable interface.

If you have ever driven a modern paddle shift automatic hard...you soon realize that traditional manual transmissions will...in the near future...be pass'e.
 
Ran across another impressive 6R80 2016 Mustang 5.0 with IRS.

This car has a factory stock 6R80 automatic transmission with a replacement Circle D torque converter installed...
...and a STOCK factory 5.0 Coyote longblock that had an F-1 Procharger bolted on in place of its original intake manifold.

It received a tune...and went 9.2 @147 mph on its first time at the track.
Amazing for a production factory longblock that has not even had the valve covers off.

https://www.facebook.com/ProCharger/videos/10155065112051782/
 
Well....Good news and bad news.

The street driven 7 sec 6R80 automatic Coyote Mustang from Palm Beach Dyno set a new record of 7.92 @ 176.6 mph in Bradenton this past weekend.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R35bAJ8QLsY

The bad news...is that the fly by wire throttle stuck...a second time...sending him into a retaining wall.
Driver Ken Bjonnes was not hurt and the car is already being repaired.

What is also noteworthy about both Mustangs in this thread, beyond the fact they are factory 6R80 automatics is that they are both IRS cars as well.
 
Well....Good news and bad news.

The street driven 7 sec 6R80 automatic Coyote Mustang from Palm Beach Dyno set a new record of 7.92 @ 176.6 mph in Bradenton this past weekend.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R35bAJ8QLsY

The bad news...is that the fly by wire throttle stuck...a second time...sending him into a retaining wall.
Driver Ken Bjonnes was not hurt and the car is already being repaired.

Coyote 5_0 crash.jpg
 
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