Are tuned 12/13 faster than tuned 14+
With enough HP, a RWD WILL NOT catch an AWD. I have raced my AWD 911 Turbo for years and can attest to this. There will be a point when the AWD pulls away far enough that the RWD WILL NOT catch it. If you're really concerned with being beat on a roll in an AWD, just add more HP.
I am not so sure about that...

Oops didn't see the "stock" part
Last edited by TMC M5; Jul 4, 2016 at 08:33 PM.
I am not so sure about that...

Oops didn't see the "stock" part
I never claimed to be a mathematical genius, I do claim however to be quite good in math or at least highly competent, which you're clearly not. You keep using percentages as the basis for your BS argument for rounding and I find it laughable. Rounding from 11.87 to 11.8 is one thing, rounding from 11.87 to 12.0 is grossly inaccurate as far as drag racing is concerned. Your own words were these cars run about 12 flat @120, if you use this formula (which took me all of 5 minutes on my crappy windows calculator, pardon if it's not perfect):
t = 5.825* ( w / h ) 0.3333333 s = 234 * ( h / w ) 0.333333
Where "t" = 1/4 mile time, where "w" = weight of your car, where "h" = horsepower, and where "s" = trap speed
I calculate a 4700 pound E63 S (with driver) would need 537 crank HP to run a 12.0 @113. Of course this isn't factoring in gravity, drag, rolling resistance, torque, gear ratios, final drive, on and on. It's a HUGE ballpark. 577 HP (just using the factory number) will show our cars run 11.7 @116 using this formula. I think you pulled the 12 flat @120 number out of your ***...ahem...mouth, LOL.
https://www.easycalculation.com/othe...calculator.php
look familiar copy cat? purely brilliant you are



This is our core formula before adding what I mentioned in my previous post. The faster the car goes (velocity), the more air pushes against the car (you also have to factor in the density of the air and the effect it exerts on the car but I doubt you thought of that), this all factors into drag coefficient. So given a RWD 2014+ W212 E63 S has the same aerodynamic drag coefficient as its AWD brother, we're now beyond the shape and slipperiness of the car and down to... wait for it... wait for it... Weight, rolling resistance, torque, gear ratios, final drive, traction, OMG it could go on and on.
omg none of that matters in the youtube vid in trying to guestimate when the rwd started pulling on the awd! you are far to dense to understand that and trying to demonstrate an intellectual prowess which you just dont possess

So if one runs an 11.49 1/4 mile, do we not colloquially say we ran an 11.4? You asserted that these cars run 12 flat 1/4 mile times @120 (which I believe you pulled out of your butt). So using your logic, if I run an 11.7 and overstate by 2.5 percent, I actually ran an 11.4075. I don't know of any drag racer that would agree with your penchant for overstating by 2.5%, NOT ONE. There is a reason we don't understate or overstate 1/4 mile times genius. Do you know what that reason is???
no one is talking about rounding their 1/4 times genius, well except you
... we are talking about a benchmark conservative estimated average stock 1/4 mile time to use as a starting point... you're the moron that cant seem to grasp that and instead is like "no way! 11.6565198 all day long! 12 is wayyyy off to use as an average!" lol
way to contradict yourself smarty 
http://dragtimes.com/Mercedes-Benz-E...lip-26391.html
Tool.
if not, then im done feeding the troll
Last edited by gaspam; Jul 4, 2016 at 11:58 PM.

and approx 33 minutes... no way.. you have to take into account if the wind is at the car's back or if its running into the wind and if the wind switches direction

bro im an electrician and cars use electricity and stuff
https://www.easycalculation.com/othe...calculator.php
look familiar copy cat? purely brilliant you are


You would impress me if you took a more scientific point of view.
What if one car has race gas + tune and the other car doesn't? What if one car has Carbon Ceramic breaks and the other car doesn't? What if one car is in manual and the other is S+? OMG I could go on. Of course you can tell if a car is stock or not depending on the times it runs, but you still have the factors I mentioned to consider. You just do. That isn't disputable. Someone really trying to figure this out would understand that you must compare apples to apples and trying to determine this from a YouTube video (basically a completely unknown test bed as you do not know the configuration of the two cars), you CANNOT determine what you're trying to determine accurately.
You're bull****ting like nuts is what you're doing.
If you really want to solve this, take (2) BONE STOCK E63 S cars with the same configuration across the board, one RWD and one AWD, and run the cars side by side. Same gas type and amount, same driver weight, etc, etc. That is the only way to make an accurate determination. PERIOD.
So you can continue to try and crack smart *** remarks but what I'm saying is true. You must know what it is you want to test before you test it and control the test to eliminate errors. If I'm an idiot for that, then most other people are too.
... we are talking about a benchmark conservative estimated average stock 1/4 mile time to use as a starting point... you're the moron that cant seem to grasp that and instead is like "no way! 11.6565198 all day long! 12 is wayyyy off to use as an average!" lol
You are really trying hard to save face, I explained it very well in my previous post and you just keep making yourself look like a$$


http://dragtimes.com/Mercedes-Benz-E...lip-26391.html

Man you are a dumb ****. Thanks for the entertainment!
Oh boy...
Next time you begin spouting off on a forum, please know that some people are actually reading your post's.
You are a BS artist and I simply called you on it.
Last edited by proxygeek; Jul 5, 2016 at 01:12 AM.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
(I say that tongue in cheek).
Last edited by proxygeek; Jul 5, 2016 at 01:18 AM.
(I say that tongue in cheek).You would impress me if you took a more scientific point of view.
What if one car has race gas + tune and the other car doesn't? ANSWER-THEY DONT, VID STATES STOCK FOR STOCK MORON What if one car has Carbon Ceramic breaks and the other car doesn't? ANSWER-DOESNT MATTER..What if one car is in manual and the other is S+? ANSWER-DOESNT MATTER AS WE ARE APPROXIMATING THE 2 CARS IN THE VID, NOT YOUR MOMS CAR OR YOUR FRIENDS CAR ..OMG I could go on. Of course you can tell if a car is stock or not depending on the times it runs, but you still have the factors I mentioned to consider. You just do. That isn't disputable. Someone really trying to figure this out would understand that you must compare apples to apples and trying to determine this from a YouTube video (basically a completely unknown test bed as you do not know the configuration of the two cars -AGAIN SMARTY, WE DO KNOW CONFIGURATION, VIDEO STATES IT), you CANNOT determine what you're trying to determine accurately. NO ONE CARES IF WE GET IT TO THE 1/10000TH'S OF A MPH IN ESTIMATING WHAT MPH THE RWD STARTED TO PULL ON THE AWD IN THE SPECIFIC VID IN THIS THREAD.... ITS AN APPROXIMATION!!!!!!!! NO ONE SAID ITS 100% ACCURATE

If you really want to solve this, take (2) BONE STOCK E63 S cars with the same configuration across the board (EXACTLY WHAT THEY DID IN THE VIDEO MORON), one RWD and one AWD, and run the cars side by side. Same gas type and amount, same driver weight, etc, etc.(LMAO ARE YOU KIDDING ME?? YOU LEFT OUT EMPTY BLADDERS FOR BOTH DRIVERS AND SAME TIRE PRESSURE, EXACT SAME TIRE TREAD AMOUNT,ETCCCC
) That is the only way to make an accurate determination. PERIOD. (AGAIN NO ONE GIVE A CRAP ABOUT 100% ACCURACY IN approximating WHAT SPEED ONE CAR STARTED PULLING ON THE OTHER CAR IN A YOUTUBE VID.... BTW APPROXIMATION IS BY DEFINITION NOT 100% ACCURACY MORON)AGAIN, WE DO KNOW, THEY ARE BOTH STOCK... THATS ENOUGH FOR AN APPROXIMATION as to what mph they will be at after approx 12 secs (~120mph)

all you do is talk and contradict yourself.... i think you are DavidKuo0330 trying to get back on the board after your previous ban for being such a toolbag lol
Last edited by gaspam; Jul 5, 2016 at 02:04 AM.
The ultimate point is that the AWD is at a disadvantage but there is a point where an RWD isn't catching it given the AWD has enough HP. My 911 Turbo had an official top speed of 189 (tested at 193) and that damn car would do every bit of that. I use to race M cars all the time and they couldn't catch me. That car made about 500 HP and it just kept pulling and pulling. Now, if I raced a 996 911 GT2 with about 480 HP (476 HP), it would walk me every time.

Surely even you can agree with that method?
Collect a sample size, about 12 samples as I said above, and render an average, that will give you a pretty damn good idea of what the average 1/4 mile time is. I would ensure that all times are from stock AWD cars to the best of your knowledge.

Considering how much you have contradicted yourself and changed your stories', you are one of the biggest tools I have ever encountered in a forum. The mods can see I'm not the guy you're referencing.
and if you knew how to read, you would see in the video that they state when the RWD is faster on that race at 125 mph+ ... all the while you are coming up with dumb arguments lol
So you know how you do this? SAMPLE SIZE. You need to gather about 12 sample times and then average that out. I would gather high and low outliers, so the lowest 11 second run you can find for a stock E63 S and the highest 12 second run you can find for a stock E63 S, then I would use about 10 samples in between the outlier numbers and render an average.
Surely even you can agree with that method?
I NEVER CLAIMED AN AVERAGE OF 11.7, NEVER. From anecdote, I have seen several E63 S runs in the mid 11s from people who claim to have stock cars. I can also figure out the car does 11s by the formula I posted earlier and the 0-62 time. It's not hard to calculate that. You said the car runs about 12 second 1/4 mile times at 120 mph which is patently false. I totally get that you were rounding, but you don't just round 1/4 mile times like that. Dumb.

Likewise our W212 4matic S's wins the 0-110mph game to the M5 CP but 110+ the M5 will slowly creep up and away.
Both scenarios have this outcome because of the AWD lugging the front wheels.
Stephen
so again, STFU and stop running your mouth and come prove you're right bro... what you dont want to come make a bunch of easy money off me?

nah, if one wants to hide their identity its pretty easy on the internet.... but im sure you know these things as an electrician, i mean electrical engineer
Last edited by gaspam; Jul 5, 2016 at 02:47 AM.
I think the rwd 's tuned will be significantly faster than tuned AWD from any roll race that the rwd does not have to worry about traction. The video above shows not just traction advantage of the AWD, but also hp advantage. I dug around the Web looking for stock m157 dynos and it seems the rwd cars no matter the manufacturer rating, typically dyno less than the AWD ones (CLS being the exceptions, smaller sample size, all over the place numbers wise with their P89 package). I feel MB intentionally underrated the AWD versions more to eliminate the losses associated with the drive train.
I think the rwd 's tuned will be significantly faster than tuned AWD from any roll race that the rwd does not have to worry about traction. The video above shows not just traction advantage of the AWD, but also hp advantage. I dug around the Web looking for stock m157 dynos and it seems the rwd cars no matter the manufacturer rating, typically dyno less than the AWD ones (CLS being the exceptions, smaller sample size, all over the place numbers wise with their P89 package). I feel MB intentionally underrated the AWD versions more to eliminate the losses associated with the drive train.
"you cannot compare the AWD 63’s to the RWD 63’s. The AWD’s will be missing about 100 TRQ…. No matter who tunes it."
Then when I asked why, the response was:
"There is a gearbox limiter in the TCU software that prevents us from making full requested TRQ."
So basically that was implying that the 2014 have a limiter in the TCU and the 2012-2013 do not. Not sure how accurate this information is, but if it is accurate, one could assume the addition of a front driveshaft in an AWD car would be the culprit of an added gearbox torque limiter.







