Lancia Stratos reverse gear speed
Discussion
GVK said:
Saw a comment that the Lancia Stratos could do 100 mph in reverse, I think that's absolute b
ks as for it to that it would need to be able to do 100mph in FIRST gear too! As fundamentally the manual gearbox reverse gear uses the same ratio as first.
Am I correct in my assumption?
37.4mph at 8000 in reverse gear per https://rallycars.com/cars/lancia-stratos-2/lancia...
ks as for it to that it would need to be able to do 100mph in FIRST gear too! As fundamentally the manual gearbox reverse gear uses the same ratio as first.Am I correct in my assumption?
Gear ratios - speed at 8000 RPM:
1:3.554 - 64.83 Km/h
2:2.459 - 93.69 Km/h
3:1.781 - 129.36 Km/h
4:1.32 - 174.54 Km/h
5:0.986 - 233.67 Km/h
R:3.3
GVK said:
Saw a comment that the Lancia Stratos could do 100 mph in reverse, I think that's absolute b
ks as for it to that it would need to be able to do 100mph in FIRST gear too! As fundamentally the manual gearbox reverse gear uses the same ratio as first.
Am I correct in my assumption?
Right speed wrong car? The LCC Rocket clocked 104mph in reverse.
ks as for it to that it would need to be able to do 100mph in FIRST gear too! As fundamentally the manual gearbox reverse gear uses the same ratio as first.Am I correct in my assumption?
GVK said:
As fundamentally the manual gearbox reverse gear uses the same ratio as first.
I'm pretty sure that reverse gear, in almost all cars, uses a separate unique set of gears unrelated to any of the forward gears. Thus the reverse gear ratio could be whatever the manufacturer chooses. They're also often straight-cut rather than helical gearwheels, hence the whining sound in reverse gear. With some old cars if they couldn't get up a hill in first it was worth trying to get up backwards, as it was a lower ratio than first.
Timer said:
Right speed wrong car? The LCC Rocket clocked 104mph in reverse.
Bike gearboxes don't have reverse gears. Thus if using a bike gearbox in a car, some other method to reverse is needed. Adding a separate 'reverse' gearbox then means that all the normal ratios are available in both directions, hence the car could go as fast backwards if not for the stability issues with high-speed reversing.samoht said:
GVK said:
As fundamentally the manual gearbox reverse gear uses the same ratio as first.
I'm pretty sure that reverse gear, in almost all cars, uses a separate unique set of gears unrelated to any of the forward gears. Thus the reverse gear ratio could be whatever the manufacturer chooses. They're also often straight-cut rather than helical gearwheels, hence the whining sound in reverse gear. With some old cars if they couldn't get up a hill in first it was worth trying to get up backwards, as it was a lower ratio than first.
samoht said:
GVK said:
As fundamentally the manual gearbox reverse gear uses the same ratio as first.
I'm pretty sure that reverse gear, in almost all cars, uses a separate unique set of gears unrelated to any of the forward gears. Thus the reverse gear ratio could be whatever the manufacturer chooses. They're also often straight-cut rather than helical gearwheels, hence the whining sound in reverse gear. With some old cars if they couldn't get up a hill in first it was worth trying to get up backwards, as it was a lower ratio than first.
Timer said:
Right speed wrong car? The LCC Rocket clocked 104mph in reverse.
Bike gearboxes don't have reverse gears. Thus if using a bike gearbox in a car, some other method to reverse is needed. Adding a separate 'reverse' gearbox then means that all the normal ratios are available in both directions, hence the car could go as fast backwards if not for the stability issues with high-speed reversing.
All the facts
samoht said:
GVK said:
As fundamentally the manual gearbox reverse gear uses the same ratio as first.
I'm pretty sure that reverse gear, in almost all cars, uses a separate unique set of gears unrelated to any of the forward gears. Thus the reverse gear ratio could be whatever the manufacturer chooses. They're also often straight-cut rather than helical gearwheels, hence the whining sound in reverse gear. With some old cars if they couldn't get up a hill in first it was worth trying to get up backwards, as it was a lower ratio than first.
Transpires that an image of cars racing in reverse looks very much like an image of cars racing normally, but the Dutch ran a race of Daf 66s in reverse - absolute bloody chaos ensued. This is what you can do with an old school Variomatic CVT transmission
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLgPTJWAysY

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

samoht said:
GVK said:
As fundamentally the manual gearbox reverse gear uses the same ratio as first.
I'm pretty sure that reverse gear, in almost all cars, uses a separate unique set of gears unrelated to any of the forward gears. Thus the reverse gear ratio could be whatever the manufacturer chooses. They're also often straight-cut rather than helical gearwheels, hence the whining sound in reverse gear. With some old cars if they couldn't get up a hill in first it was worth trying to get up backwards, as it was a lower ratio than first.
Timer said:
Right speed wrong car? The LCC Rocket clocked 104mph in reverse.
Bike gearboxes don't have reverse gears. Thus if using a bike gearbox in a car, some other method to reverse is needed. Adding a separate 'reverse' gearbox then means that all the normal ratios are available in both directions, hence the car could go as fast backwards if not for the stability issues with high-speed reversing.Edited by richhead on Wednesday 12th November 00:39
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