How not to do a burnout
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How not to do a burnout
Not sure if this was posted before on TGO. It's a third gen at a burnout contest. A one wheel burnout does wrong.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFdCKRlgQVQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFdCKRlgQVQ
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Re: How not to do a burnout
I"m sorry but I fail to see how a tire exploding makes the guy an idiot and how one goes about preventing this by building more than just the motor??
You cant control a tire explosion other making sure you have fresh good quality tires.
You cant control a tire explosion other making sure you have fresh good quality tires.
Re: How not to do a burnout
Also, why have a burn-out car that only spins one tire? You get twice the smoke with two!
Re: How not to do a burnout
IMO, he is an idiot for even entering his car into the contest to begin with. Alot of damage there, Im sure he did not forsee. Maybe its just me, but, I just dont see why anyone would do that with their car?
He sure wowed the crowd though. Im sure he impressed them. well worth the damage, I guess.
He sure wowed the crowd though. Im sure he impressed them. well worth the damage, I guess.
Re: How not to do a burnout
https://www.thirdgen.org/forums/hist...or-camaro.html
It's already been around for awhile... If you look those are Hercules HP 4000's. It doesn't really matter, they're still junk tires. This link might have something to do with the failure too... http://lemon.onecle.com/hercules/hercules-hp4000.html Above all I think the reason the car tore apart is because of all the rust. I've blown more then a few tires in thirdgens and never had anything more then a mess of rubber rubbed all over the fender or some scratches from the belts.
It's already been around for awhile... If you look those are Hercules HP 4000's. It doesn't really matter, they're still junk tires. This link might have something to do with the failure too... http://lemon.onecle.com/hercules/hercules-hp4000.html Above all I think the reason the car tore apart is because of all the rust. I've blown more then a few tires in thirdgens and never had anything more then a mess of rubber rubbed all over the fender or some scratches from the belts.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
express delivery from the failboat on that one. There is some serious damage to the car there. Frankly its suprising no one was hurt. That was a lot of power unleashed when that tire let go.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
Have you ever had a belt let go like that? I have seen a couple SUVs get WASTED from a belt letting go doing the speed limit much less spinning like that thing was.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
I had a retreaded (wasnt told it was a retread) let go in an old truck at highway speeds. It unwraped and caught the bed side fender support, and caused a lockup. Truck did a 360 in the road. Could have been really bad.
Lots of carnage when a tire come apart at speed. Usually they just blow in the middle.
Lots of carnage when a tire come apart at speed. Usually they just blow in the middle.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
i am surprised so many people were that close, and that no one got hurt.
Re: How not to do a burnout
Wrong, unless theres a 2:1 ratio difference built into the spider/side gear assembly.
Wheel RPM is engine RPM X trans ratio X final drive ratio. Regardless of how many tires are spinning.
Re: How not to do a burnout
heres my camaro when i first bought it. running on 7 cylinders, broken 700r4. and a fuel issue
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8KJ7EWqWGlE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8KJ7EWqWGlE
Re: How not to do a burnout


I wish I had a pic of the one that blew at 80mph on the interstate. All that was left of that one were the beads and some shredded sidewalls. The sidewalls looked like the fringes on Grand Ma's couch.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
You know, I'll be the first to call someone a dumbass if they're being a dumbass, but that could have happened to any one of us if you've ever done a burnout. A tire can explode if you have a perfectly working posi and brand new tires on the car... and all the comments about the junk tires and speed rating... heh, speed rating has NOTHING to do with how fast you can spin your tires in a burnout and I know that I'm not going to enter a burnout contest with new tires, I'm going to save junk tires for that. If I enter a burnout contest I'm going to know that something like that can happen, but I'm still not going to be thrilled about it if it does.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
The differential functions like this: The average speed of both axles equals the average speed of the ring gear. If the ring gear is turning 100 RPM (just for example's sake), and the vehicle is going straight with no tire slippage or spin, each axle is turning at 100 RPM; the average speed of the axles is 100 (left) + 100 (right) = 200; 200/2 = (average axle speed = ring-gear speed) 100. In a turn, with the ring-gear turning 100 RPM, the axle speeds may be some thing like 80 RPM (right) and 120 RPM (left), but the average speed of both axles will still equal ring-gear speed ( 80 + 120 =200, 200/2 = 100). With the ring turning 100 RPM, and one axle's speed is 0 (zero), the average wheel speed still must equal ring-gear speed, so, using the same example ring-gear speed of 100 RPM; ring gear = left + right divided by 2; 100 = 0 (left, stationary wheel) + ? (right, spinning wheel) /2; 100 = (0 + ?)/2; 100 = (0 + 200)/2. Right wheel speed, with left wheel stationary, is twice ring gear speed, which would equate to twice the indicated speed on the speedometer; or, in a car with a 3.00:1 axle ratio, in high (1:1 ratio) gear, at 5000 engine RPM, that right side tire would be spinning at (5000/3) x 2 = 1667 x 2 = 3334 RPM, as opposed to 1667 RPM if the vehicle was going straight with both axles turning at the same speed (RPM).
Bill
P.S.: All of that and $1.50 will get you a cold soda from most any vending machine.
Re: How not to do a burnout
No, a diff splits torque not RPM. If you want to observe this get an OBD-II car with ABS and an open diff.
Go to the ABS menue and select live data, have the cars drive wheels lifted and someone holding one wheel stationary, if what you say is true then the MPH read out of the spinning wheel will will be exactly twice the MPH read out of the speedo sensor.
But you will observe that that is not the case.
Think about it, if what you say is true I could remove the Pass side drive shaft from my Mazda and lock that sides output stationary and instantly take my theoretical top speed from 135 mph to 270 mph. I'm sure the guys at maxton and bonneville would love to know about this new speed secret
Go to the ABS menue and select live data, have the cars drive wheels lifted and someone holding one wheel stationary, if what you say is true then the MPH read out of the spinning wheel will will be exactly twice the MPH read out of the speedo sensor.
But you will observe that that is not the case.
Think about it, if what you say is true I could remove the Pass side drive shaft from my Mazda and lock that sides output stationary and instantly take my theoretical top speed from 135 mph to 270 mph. I'm sure the guys at maxton and bonneville would love to know about this new speed secret
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Re: How not to do a burnout
No. You could (and would) acheive the equivalent wheel speed on a no-load tire, but you would still have to have the exponentially greater power available to get your Mazda to 270mph. Your example is just like saying my Z28 with a 2:1 axle ratio would hit xxx mph; it wouldn't, without the required power to pull the sky-high gearing (No need for a
on this answer).
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Re: How not to do a burnout
No, a diff splits torque not RPM. If you want to observe this get an OBD-II car with ABS and an open diff.
Go to the ABS menue and select live data, have the cars drive wheels lifted and someone holding one wheel stationary, if what you say is true then the MPH read out of the spinning wheel will will be exactly twice the MPH read out of the speedo sensor.
But you will observe that that is not the case.
Think about it, if what you say is true I could remove the Pass side drive shaft from my Mazda and lock that sides output stationary and instantly take my theoretical top speed from 135 mph to 270 mph. I'm sure the guys at maxton and bonneville would love to know about this new speed secret
Go to the ABS menue and select live data, have the cars drive wheels lifted and someone holding one wheel stationary, if what you say is true then the MPH read out of the spinning wheel will will be exactly twice the MPH read out of the speedo sensor.
But you will observe that that is not the case.
Think about it, if what you say is true I could remove the Pass side drive shaft from my Mazda and lock that sides output stationary and instantly take my theoretical top speed from 135 mph to 270 mph. I'm sure the guys at maxton and bonneville would love to know about this new speed secret


But locking one tire and spinning the other wouldnt mean its going 2 times as fast. The torque is just transfered to that 1 wheel.
Plus this is just an open differential anyway so it never will lock the other tire transfer power to both tires. It just direct drives 1 axle. I just dont see no load or load changing the overall speed.
EDIT: Looks like they were on a metal plate when doing the burnout. Probably overheated the tire and melted through and just blew up or poor constructed tire. Big rigs blow tires all the time after a enough miles
Last edited by Orr89RocZ; Feb 22, 2010 at 01:23 PM.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
Do you think the axle side gears and the diff case pinion gears ever disengage from each other? How could they....
And, BOTH axles, via axle side gear, diff case pinion gear, and diff case pinion gear cross-shaft, are equally 'tied' (mechanically, through the afore mentioned gear-train) to the differential case, AND thus to the ring gear....that is why the average speed of the two axles must always equal the speed of the ring gear
Peace, out.
Bill
And, BOTH axles, via axle side gear, diff case pinion gear, and diff case pinion gear cross-shaft, are equally 'tied' (mechanically, through the afore mentioned gear-train) to the differential case, AND thus to the ring gear....that is why the average speed of the two axles must always equal the speed of the ring gear

Peace, out.
Bill
Last edited by Burnout91; Feb 22, 2010 at 02:47 PM. Reason: had to get in the last word in
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Re: How not to do a burnout
the bead belt failed..= tire side wall at rim seat. broke
this should never take place ever! tire failed.. bottom line.
nothing to do with tire speed. as this steel (belt)cable. should never brake.
tire let go way before it's time. plane and simple.
and did you see how it split the seam of the car..
just not his Lucky day..
this should never take place ever! tire failed.. bottom line.
nothing to do with tire speed. as this steel (belt)cable. should never brake.
tire let go way before it's time. plane and simple.

and did you see how it split the seam of the car..
just not his Lucky day..
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Re: How not to do a burnout
Do you think the axle side gears and the diff case pinion gears ever disengage from each other? How could they....
And, BOTH axles, via axle side gear, diff case pinion gear, and diff case pinion gear cross-shaft, are equally 'tied' (mechanically, through the afore mentioned gear-train) to the differential case, AND thus to the ring gear....that is why the average speed of the two axles must always equal the speed of the ring gear
Peace, out.
Bill
And, BOTH axles, via axle side gear, diff case pinion gear, and diff case pinion gear cross-shaft, are equally 'tied' (mechanically, through the afore mentioned gear-train) to the differential case, AND thus to the ring gear....that is why the average speed of the two axles must always equal the speed of the ring gear

Peace, out.
Bill
But in this case, i think that guy just had an open diff rear end. So it doesnt matter if one wheel was locked or not. Open diffs mean just one wheel is tied to the drive train. The other axle just free floats there to spin at whatever speed the car is moving at. Doing a burnout loads the tires/motor/drivetrain. Maybe not as much as a full traction WOT pull, but does load it. So being an open diff, the speedo will show same speed as the tire because the speedo is calibrated based on tire diameter and gear ratio. Whatever the tire spins at the speedo shows. Why would there be an amplification factor across the spider gears on either differential design?
I would think tire failure based on above mentioned. I've seen TONS of 1 wheel peelers and many do burnouts but never seen a tire explode unless it wore past the rubber and air pressure blow it open.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
The reason he's an idiot and anyone who does this is because it's a waste of money and does not prove you have anything. I have never understood the burnout contests because they are useless. You do a burnout at the dragstrip because you need the tire heated up to stick that is needed. But this is just dumb plain and simple.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
I agree, This guy is a total idiot and by the looks of it he was proud of it to by the way he was raising his fist into the air. It gets me to see how people get enjoyment out of burnout contests. Hell any car can do a burnout what is so special about that. So me some hard work high horsepower and low ETs and to me thats is enjoyment................
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Re: How not to do a burnout
I saw that vid just the other day but from a different camera angle. I have a question on the one wheel peel, I have the 'limited slip differential'- so that means it isn't a true posi, but it still won't one wheel peel, right? And I heard when he shifted gears, when I've done a burn-out, in my car (auto trans) it almost always shifts into second and once third (its a TH-350)
I don't know how to quote, but someone above has a video of their camaro having some fun on 7 cylinders...
Well I have one of me in my trans am doing a burnout on 6 cylinders! (its a 350, no kidding). Two lobes on the cam were completely worn down, there was a collapsed lifter, and it had a couple bent pushrods! I didn't know that at the time, I mean I knew there were some problems but I didn't know it was that bad! You can beat these engines into the ground and they still run like champs. And they're relatively cheap to fix too. There isn't much smoke in the vid because the tires were so shot, and I bet the poor car was making half the power it is now. And sorry for the angle, you get more of my hair than of the car lol, but it was filmed on my phone. I gotta bring my brother along next time to film.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAv579YbJ7s
I don't know how to quote, but someone above has a video of their camaro having some fun on 7 cylinders...

Well I have one of me in my trans am doing a burnout on 6 cylinders! (its a 350, no kidding). Two lobes on the cam were completely worn down, there was a collapsed lifter, and it had a couple bent pushrods! I didn't know that at the time, I mean I knew there were some problems but I didn't know it was that bad! You can beat these engines into the ground and they still run like champs. And they're relatively cheap to fix too. There isn't much smoke in the vid because the tires were so shot, and I bet the poor car was making half the power it is now. And sorry for the angle, you get more of my hair than of the car lol, but it was filmed on my phone. I gotta bring my brother along next time to film.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAv579YbJ7s
Last edited by 84blacktransam; Feb 22, 2010 at 07:48 PM.
Re: How not to do a burnout
after i did the burnout and donuts i did a tune up and when i pulled 2 plugs out oil poured out......oops.......lol the car ran for a while until i pulled the 305 and in the middle of doing a well built 355. im also building the transmission and rear end to handle the power.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
WRONG- Jerrywho is correct.
The differential functions like this: The average speed of both axles equals the average speed of the ring gear. If the ring gear is turning 100 RPM (just for example's sake), and the vehicle is going straight with no tire slippage or spin, each axle is turning at 100 RPM; the average speed of the axles is 100 (left) + 100 (right) = 200; 200/2 = (average axle speed = ring-gear speed) 100. In a turn, with the ring-gear turning 100 RPM, the axle speeds may be some thing like 80 RPM (right) and 120 RPM (left), but the average speed of both axles will still equal ring-gear speed ( 80 + 120 =200, 200/2 = 100). With the ring turning 100 RPM, and one axle's speed is 0 (zero), the average wheel speed still must equal ring-gear speed, so, using the same example ring-gear speed of 100 RPM; ring gear = left + right divided by 2; 100 = 0 (left, stationary wheel) + ? (right, spinning wheel) /2; 100 = (0 + ?)/2; 100 = (0 + 200)/2. Right wheel speed, with left wheel stationary, is twice ring gear speed, which would equate to twice the indicated speed on the speedometer; or, in a car with a 3.00:1 axle ratio, in high (1:1 ratio) gear, at 5000 engine RPM, that right side tire would be spinning at (5000/3) x 2 = 1667 x 2 = 3334 RPM, as opposed to 1667 RPM if the vehicle was going straight with both axles turning at the same speed (RPM).
Bill
P.S.: All of that and $1.50 will get you a cold soda from most any vending machine.
The differential functions like this: The average speed of both axles equals the average speed of the ring gear. If the ring gear is turning 100 RPM (just for example's sake), and the vehicle is going straight with no tire slippage or spin, each axle is turning at 100 RPM; the average speed of the axles is 100 (left) + 100 (right) = 200; 200/2 = (average axle speed = ring-gear speed) 100. In a turn, with the ring-gear turning 100 RPM, the axle speeds may be some thing like 80 RPM (right) and 120 RPM (left), but the average speed of both axles will still equal ring-gear speed ( 80 + 120 =200, 200/2 = 100). With the ring turning 100 RPM, and one axle's speed is 0 (zero), the average wheel speed still must equal ring-gear speed, so, using the same example ring-gear speed of 100 RPM; ring gear = left + right divided by 2; 100 = 0 (left, stationary wheel) + ? (right, spinning wheel) /2; 100 = (0 + ?)/2; 100 = (0 + 200)/2. Right wheel speed, with left wheel stationary, is twice ring gear speed, which would equate to twice the indicated speed on the speedometer; or, in a car with a 3.00:1 axle ratio, in high (1:1 ratio) gear, at 5000 engine RPM, that right side tire would be spinning at (5000/3) x 2 = 1667 x 2 = 3334 RPM, as opposed to 1667 RPM if the vehicle was going straight with both axles turning at the same speed (RPM).
Bill
P.S.: All of that and $1.50 will get you a cold soda from most any vending machine.

Even if all you say was true we really dont know if he has an open diff or not. Could be just a worn out clutch posi. No other gears at all in that diff besids the ring and pinion.
Last edited by 1320_Guy; Feb 24, 2010 at 07:13 PM.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
If it doesnt make sense to you, then search and learn.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differe...hanical_device)
Or this one
http://www.howstuffworks.com/differential2.htm
It does not get any clearer than that.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differe...hanical_device)
Or this one
http://www.howstuffworks.com/differential2.htm
It does not get any clearer than that.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
Ok whats your point. The only diffrence between going straight with both axles and having one stoped is the idler gears will turn to compinsate for the one axle standing still and the other one turning.
For example i did this the other day on my s10. Wanted to check the gear ratio in my rearend. So i jacked one tire off the ground and left the other one down. The code in my glove box said it came with 3.73s. Turned the wheel one full turn and guess what the pinion yoke turned abour 3 3/4 turns. So ur telling me i acturaly have 1.865 gears in my rearend cause the axle off the ground was turning twice as fast as the carrier. Didn't know chevy ever used that gear in anything.
For example i did this the other day on my s10. Wanted to check the gear ratio in my rearend. So i jacked one tire off the ground and left the other one down. The code in my glove box said it came with 3.73s. Turned the wheel one full turn and guess what the pinion yoke turned abour 3 3/4 turns. So ur telling me i acturaly have 1.865 gears in my rearend cause the axle off the ground was turning twice as fast as the carrier. Didn't know chevy ever used that gear in anything.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
Yeah, thats what I was thinking. The idler / spider gears in the differential will turn to allow the other axle to move when one is stopped. They just rotate around each other. As long as they are all the same size, no gear reductions, they should turn the same. Picture on howstuffworks clearly shows that.
Heres a better one, look at the 1 minute mark. One side is stopped, one moves. Same as the ring gear speed, atleast it looks that way to me. Maybe it is moving slightly faster but it looks like the free floating spiders are not the same size?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKaF20iFU9s
Heres a better one, look at the 1 minute mark. One side is stopped, one moves. Same as the ring gear speed, atleast it looks that way to me. Maybe it is moving slightly faster but it looks like the free floating spiders are not the same size?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKaF20iFU9s
Last edited by Orr89RocZ; Feb 24, 2010 at 11:15 PM.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jgeNyv6uxN0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zOijFK7uh6U
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSRAOeCcs6o
Notice the change in speed of the tire when the other is stopped. I'm done trying to explain it though. That is just how it is.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zOijFK7uh6U
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSRAOeCcs6o
Notice the change in speed of the tire when the other is stopped. I'm done trying to explain it though. That is just how it is.
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Re: How not to do a burnout
You can lead a thirsty horse to water, but you can't make the stubborn animal drink...
Peace, (really, this time) out.
Bill
Peace, (really, this time) out.
Bill
Re: How not to do a burnout
[quote=madmax;4449364
Notice the change in speed of the tire when the other is stopped. I'm done trying to explain it though. That is just how it is.[/quote]
Ofcourse the still spinning wheel spins faster when the other stops, the remaining wheel cant provide as much resistance a both, but while the wheel spins faster the engine RPM goes up as well because of the drop in load.
I gave you a test to try but since not everyone here has a good scanner and a vehicle capable of live data streaming heres a simpler test anyone here can do even with a posi.
1320 guy did this but to confirm your "theory" you'll need to do it twice. Once with both wheels off the ground with another person turning the opposite wheel in the same direction and speed as you turn yours.
Say you had a 3.5:1 rear, turning the wheels once would equal 3.5 turns of the drive shaft, now if you folks are right (and you are not ) then with that friend holding his side still is will take you 7 turns of the wheel to equal 1 turn of the drive shaft.
Regardless of your actual ratio it would be simple enough to observe that it takes exactly double the input RPM to equal the same output RPM.
Do this test, then check in and admit that you actualy learned something
Notice the change in speed of the tire when the other is stopped. I'm done trying to explain it though. That is just how it is.[/quote]
Ofcourse the still spinning wheel spins faster when the other stops, the remaining wheel cant provide as much resistance a both, but while the wheel spins faster the engine RPM goes up as well because of the drop in load.
I gave you a test to try but since not everyone here has a good scanner and a vehicle capable of live data streaming heres a simpler test anyone here can do even with a posi.
1320 guy did this but to confirm your "theory" you'll need to do it twice. Once with both wheels off the ground with another person turning the opposite wheel in the same direction and speed as you turn yours.
Say you had a 3.5:1 rear, turning the wheels once would equal 3.5 turns of the drive shaft, now if you folks are right (and you are not ) then with that friend holding his side still is will take you 7 turns of the wheel to equal 1 turn of the drive shaft.
Regardless of your actual ratio it would be simple enough to observe that it takes exactly double the input RPM to equal the same output RPM.
Do this test, then check in and admit that you actualy learned something
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Axle/Gears: MWC 9” 3.00
Re: How not to do a burnout
very interesting. But who cares. I dont have an open diff so when i do burnouts I'm sure not doing 240 mph....
Still think tire failure was due to bad tire construction but if it was infact spinning at 2x the mph he was at, that doesnt help much either.
Sure caused a crapload of damage
Still think tire failure was due to bad tire construction but if it was infact spinning at 2x the mph he was at, that doesnt help much either.
Sure caused a crapload of damage
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Re: How not to do a burnout
Member
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 258
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From: Manchester, TN
Car: 1984 Camaro z28/SC
Engine: 355
Transmission: T56
Axle/Gears: 9bolt 3.89
Re: How not to do a burnout
WRONG- Jerrywho is correct.
The differential functions like this: The average speed of both axles equals the average speed of the ring gear. If the ring gear is turning 100 RPM (just for example's sake), and the vehicle is going straight with no tire slippage or spin, each axle is turning at 100 RPM; the average speed of the axles is 100 (left) + 100 (right) = 200; 200/2 = (average axle speed = ring-gear speed) 100. In a turn, with the ring-gear turning 100 RPM, the axle speeds may be some thing like 80 RPM (right) and 120 RPM (left), but the average speed of both axles will still equal ring-gear speed ( 80 + 120 =200, 200/2 = 100). With the ring turning 100 RPM, and one axle's speed is 0 (zero), the average wheel speed still must equal ring-gear speed, so, using the same example ring-gear speed of 100 RPM; ring gear = left + right divided by 2; 100 = 0 (left, stationary wheel) + ? (right, spinning wheel) /2; 100 = (0 + ?)/2; 100 = (0 + 200)/2. Right wheel speed, with left wheel stationary, is twice ring gear speed, which would equate to twice the indicated speed on the speedometer; or, in a car with a 3.00:1 axle ratio, in high (1:1 ratio) gear, at 5000 engine RPM, that right side tire would be spinning at (5000/3) x 2 = 1667 x 2 = 3334 RPM, as opposed to 1667 RPM if the vehicle was going straight with both axles turning at the same speed (RPM).
Bill
P.S.: All of that and $1.50 will get you a cold soda from most any vending machine.
The differential functions like this: The average speed of both axles equals the average speed of the ring gear. If the ring gear is turning 100 RPM (just for example's sake), and the vehicle is going straight with no tire slippage or spin, each axle is turning at 100 RPM; the average speed of the axles is 100 (left) + 100 (right) = 200; 200/2 = (average axle speed = ring-gear speed) 100. In a turn, with the ring-gear turning 100 RPM, the axle speeds may be some thing like 80 RPM (right) and 120 RPM (left), but the average speed of both axles will still equal ring-gear speed ( 80 + 120 =200, 200/2 = 100). With the ring turning 100 RPM, and one axle's speed is 0 (zero), the average wheel speed still must equal ring-gear speed, so, using the same example ring-gear speed of 100 RPM; ring gear = left + right divided by 2; 100 = 0 (left, stationary wheel) + ? (right, spinning wheel) /2; 100 = (0 + ?)/2; 100 = (0 + 200)/2. Right wheel speed, with left wheel stationary, is twice ring gear speed, which would equate to twice the indicated speed on the speedometer; or, in a car with a 3.00:1 axle ratio, in high (1:1 ratio) gear, at 5000 engine RPM, that right side tire would be spinning at (5000/3) x 2 = 1667 x 2 = 3334 RPM, as opposed to 1667 RPM if the vehicle was going straight with both axles turning at the same speed (RPM).
Bill
P.S.: All of that and $1.50 will get you a cold soda from most any vending machine.

So you're saying if I permanently stopped one of my wheels from being able to spin and then put that wheel on a slippery surface, let's say ice, that I could just drag that wheel and drive down the road twice as fast with the same rpm
? That's basically what you are saying. Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 811
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From: 4-22 / 7-25
Car: '91 Z28 L98 G92
Engine: Modded L98
Transmission: Modded 700R4
Axle/Gears: Modded 10-Bolt
Re: How not to do a burnout
You're right, that is what I am saying; your speed would be limited by the amount of power available to pull the gearing. But, don't drag the wheel. Remove the wheel / tire assembly. Tack weld the axle flange to the axle housing, then weld a caster onto the axle flange so that it supports the car and rolls freely. Have a friend, or an enemy, or even ls six, ride along side you to get a true speed reading and then compare it to the reading on your speedometer. Be sure to get some video so that you can rub my nose in it. Report back to us. Or don't...
Last edited by Burnout91; Feb 25, 2010 at 03:29 PM. Reason: went to get ****-faced drunk.
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 8,028
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From: DC Metro Area
Car: 87TA 87Form 71Mach1 93FleetWB 04Cum
Re: How not to do a burnout
I don't get why this is that hard... even the example of it being up in the air works out, you're not turning the pinion gear, turn one side and the opposite side turns at the other speed backwards, the ring gear in housing isn't moving and the average of the 2 tires is 0.
It still works if you have a posi, posis still have spider gears, they just have something (usually clutches or cones) that add friction to the assembly if the 2 sides try to turn at different rates. Even with a good posi, if one tire has significantly more traction than the other you will sometimes do a one wheel burnout. Take an extreme example of this, say one wheel is bolted down, or the posi is worn, the motion that would normally be delivered to the un moving wheel now gets delivered to the opposite side by the spider gears driving that side at 2x that of the ring gear.
It still works if you have a posi, posis still have spider gears, they just have something (usually clutches or cones) that add friction to the assembly if the 2 sides try to turn at different rates. Even with a good posi, if one tire has significantly more traction than the other you will sometimes do a one wheel burnout. Take an extreme example of this, say one wheel is bolted down, or the posi is worn, the motion that would normally be delivered to the un moving wheel now gets delivered to the opposite side by the spider gears driving that side at 2x that of the ring gear.
Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 25,895
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From: Pittsburgh PA
Car: 89 Iroc-z
Engine: 555 BBC Turbo
Transmission: TH400
Axle/Gears: MWC 9” 3.00
Re: How not to do a burnout
zexel torsen diffs are alittle different I think but may be the same. No spider gears, but worm gears. Maybe they do the same thing
Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 811
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From: 4-22 / 7-25
Car: '91 Z28 L98 G92
Engine: Modded L98
Transmission: Modded 700R4
Axle/Gears: Modded 10-Bolt
Re: How not to do a burnout
Srry but none of that makes sence. The only way axle speed will be diffrent form the ring gear speed is if the both tires are off the ground. One will spin backwards and one will spin forwards making them both travel half the speed of the ring gear not doubling it.
Even if all you say was true we really dont know if he has an open diff or not. Could be just a worn out clutch posi. No other gears at all in that diff besids the ring and pinion.
Even if all you say was true we really dont know if he has an open diff or not. Could be just a worn out clutch posi. No other gears at all in that diff besids the ring and pinion.
Oh, it must be a Detroit Locker then, right? But wait, you said clutches....
"Srry but none of that makes sence."
Last edited by Burnout91; Feb 26, 2010 at 04:08 PM.
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From: Evington,Va
Car: 93 Formula,88 T/A,01 WS6
Engine: 93 LT1,88TPI305,01 LS1
Transmission: 93 700R4,88 700R4,01 T56
Axle/Gears: 93 3:73's,88 3:42,01 3:40







