|         Keith,   As far as Maxton is concerned, I agree with Doug King that
Dick J may be able to get away with little or no ballast at all ...... I was 
just
talking about ballast  IF  it was needed .   One BIG variable that HAS to be
factored in here is the amount of  HORSEPOWER  we are talking about in
any car we' re discussing .  Darrell simply did NOT have enough weight in 
our car anywhere on the course ...... BRICKS obviously resist being pushed
through the air, and the torque reaches a point where the tires start to lose
their respectful grip on the salt, so it has to be a balancing act on how
much ballast to bring along for the ride without being a hindrance to the
car' s best available acceleration ...... this is where experience can
count for a lot ...... and for the rest of us it' s mainly trial and error .
      IF Dick's Camaro could stay hooked up sans ballast weight at Maxton,
I think that will be helpful in his reaching his best terminal velocity .
       I have always thought " light - lighter - LIGHTEST " regarding
drag racing construction and I view  ANY and ALL ballast as a 
NECESSARY  EVIL !   As YOU very well know, the wet saline surface 
of the Bonneville course can be a formidable barrier that has to be
DEALT  WITH  ....... IF  you' re going to post those large numbers .......
AND  stay pointed in the right direction in the process.                      
                         Isn' t ALL of life just one endless LEARNING  
PROCESS  ???
  ...... keeps things kinda interesting, don' tcha think ?
                      the Northern Hemi  BDF
     A Rolling Stone Gathers No Moss 
                            and a Spinning Wheel Gains NO  SPEED
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