Took those two puppies out on the Big Willow for a spin last night and it looks like it is going to be another night of awesome racing. My beautiful wife and I are volunteering at a Canadian PGA golf tournament from Monday to Sunday next week. If things go as planned there is chance that I can join before the first race starts. Otherwise I'll join up for the second race.
I found the Camaro to be slightly more economic with the fuel at 60.20 Liter/100km vs. the Stang at approx 60.95 Liter/100km
Now, @davidt33 , You know how long the track is and it is probably going to be 20 laps. So, you can work out the distance we will race. Use the consumption numbers above to calculate how much fuel you will need and Lobban will probably put half of that in the tank. 1 mile is approx 1.605 km
Example: if the race is 50 miles total. Then we drive approx 80 km. Fuel needed will be (80/100)x60.95 = 48.76 Liters. Round it up to 49 and Lobban will probably give you 25 liters
That seems complicated as.
If its 20 minute races.
Race time divided by Lap times = Number of Laps
(1200 / x ) = ?
Divide that by 2 and go see how much fuel you need from the game.
So 1200 / 60 = 20 laps (10 laps of fuel) or 1200 / 90 = 15 laps (8 laps of fuel)
If its 30 minutes races, 1800 / x
Ok that settles it. I'll be putting in 1800 Litres of fuel.That seems complicated as.
If its 20 minute races.
Race time divided by Lap times = Number of Laps
(1200 / x ) = ?
Divide that by 2 and go see how much fuel you need from the game.
So 1200 / 60 = 20 laps (10 laps of fuel) or 1200 / 90 = 15 laps (8 laps of fuel)
If its 30 minutes races, 1800 / x
Yeah you did! I made some headway last night and brought it down, but still didn't do better than yours - well done!Looking forward to try to make it tonight. Already asked wife to cover 2nd half of son’s football practice, so I could come home and race. (Imagine that conversation!) I like Big Willy. I destoyed @GTLehman time trial but he was probably sandbagging as to come back and strip my confidence. Either way, @Rednose58 has probably laid down some insane time by now to make us want to go back to ‘soap box derby’ to fulfill our need for car racing.
@Aero,
Glad that you’re doing better, I know we all miss you.
I have a favor to ask. Could you look at my crude drawing and let me know if the part circled in blue is correct? I’m wiring up 2 sim racing platforms (flight and motorcycle) to have tactile transducers. Each Aura Bass Pro is rated at 4 Ohms. Each platform will have 2 of the bass shakers. The receiever I’m using to drive the Auras is rated for 8 Ohms. I know I can safely run it at 12 Ohms, but I’ll be reducing the power too much and have to raise the volume to drive the shakers. Conversely, a 4 Ohm load would possibly cause overheating, and a 2 Ohm load will probably blow the amp in the AVR. I’m thinking that I should wire them in parallel rather than in series to achieve 8 Ohms. I’ll also be using either an 80 Hz low pass frequency modulator (FMod) or a 50 Hz LP FMod to prevent too much shaking during the wrong times. I only want it to shake over bumps, or during engine revving, bombs/machine guns, etc.
I’ll be using the speaker connectors from the shaker AVR (Audio/Video Receiver). I plan on this wiring configuration:
+ AVR speaker connector to +bass shaker 1.
Bass shaker 1 - to + bass shaker 2.
- bass shaker 2 back to - AVR speaker connector.
That should maintain it at 8 Ohms, correct? If so, I’ll do it the same way for sim platform number 2.
Thanks!
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4, 4ohms will be 16 ohm load and limit the ability to achieve the desired power. Do the later setup.Thanks XRad. So to be clear, the straight line formula for the final value is going to be “R” = 1/( (1/R1) + (1/R2) + 1/R3) + (1/R4)? Would wiring 4, 4 Ohm transducers in series result in an 8 Ohm load? Or run it one set of 2 in series, and one set of 2 in parallel to achieve 8 Ohms. They’ll be wired into the left or right speaker connector. At a minimum, I’ll be running 14g wire. 12g might be too thick to get in the binding posts.
Ok, sure. However when it comes to audio sources, both loads are going to act the same when I'm series. Is that ok for what you doing? Btw, it's time to race. Cya.Yes, I meant to write series, not parallel. On the dry erase board I ran out of room for a series/parallel drawing. Just jotting down random thoughts at the time trying to do the “math”. Lol. I’m just trying to prevent running two amps to power each set of two Auras. I’d rather just use the one since I can send audio via toslink/optical.
Hey that's really cool Reds. I've seen the Buttkicker name mentioned a couple times but didn't quite know what it was about. I just clicked on the link, read up on it and watched part of the vid to the point where he was using it with a racing sim, which is more what I was interested in. If I am to interpret what it does is besides adding audible bass to a room it also adds vibration to a rig or chair/seat right? Like being able to get some FFB to the seat rather than just from the steering wheel? I currently use one of them office like swivel chairs with a center pole stand so I was wondering if it would have been able to connect to that. I saw from the vid it could.I know it is more satisfactory to build your own thing, but there is a SNAIL discount code for this one.....
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Sweet. Thanks a lot.Thanks again XRad. I’ll probably try and pick your brain again if that’s ok. I’ll pm you.
@David, think of the ButtKicker as a subwoofer without a speaker. Instead of sound, you get vibration from low frequency input. The Gamer 2 is meant to mount on the center pole of an office type chair (the clamp opens up, then you tighten it up. No need to modify your chair). I mounted mine to a deep well socket I put on the bottom of my Playseat Evolution. There’s no need for a “mixer” of any type. You run a cable from your PS4 to the amp, and the amp powers the ButtKicker. There’s actually a few ways you can wire it up. Mine is running thru the 3.5 mm headphone jack from my TV. The ButtKicker doesn’t make any real sound other than the piston vibrating. Your neighbors won’t hear any booming sounds like they would from a subwoofer.