And rear diff and shifter, and hey, when was the last time you knew for certain the fuel pump was keeping up?
Just sayin' - at this point, I'd test it as a package. Not for numbers, just to re-prove the concept.
Three hours on a chassis dyno, check the A/F, make sure the valvetrain is staying put, that the car still shifts and stays in gear and that the diff isn't welding itself together - tweak the rest of it on the salt. Turn around is a lot faster on a chassis dyno than waiting in line on the salt. Parts availability is also better in town.
Yeah, I know, I know - back to my asteroid . . .
Chassis-dyno? hahaha, hahahahahahahaha........we'd be paying for three hours loading the freakin thing IN THERE....The amount of time it takes to load and unload this thing, even if it didn't have the body on, is ridiculous
Good points Chris but we can really only consider engine dyno's.
The fuel pump is almost capable of outstripping a bowser, it's a Bosch 910.
Now, today I went shopping. Checked her over properly, recabbed ten years ago she's had a little bit of work on the lower doors but is essentially rust free. 302 has 70kmiles, suspension is all fresh as are the brakes, new exhaust, two batteries, two spares, floor and chassis are rust free and super straight. It has 125l Gasoline and 150l LPG.

These are made for putting a push bar on.....
