
P-51 Racer Miss America
One Second in the Life of a Racer
by Tom Fey
The Unlimiteds go flashing through the
racecourse, engines howling, air shearing, heat waves streaming. Four hundred
eighty miles an hour is 8 miles a minute, and the elite racers take about 70
seconds to cover the 9.1 mile Reno course. If you could take a souped P-51
racer flying the circuit at Reno, slow time down, and examine just one second,
what would you find?
In that one second, the V-12 Rolls-Royce
Merlin engine would have gone through 60 revolutions, with each of the 48
valves slamming open and closed 30 times. The twenty four spark plugs have
fired 720 times. Each piston has traveled a total of 60 feet in linear distance
at an average speed of 41 miles per hour, with the direction of movement
reversing 180o after every 6 inches. Three hundred and sixty power pulses have
been transmitted to the crankshaft, making 360 sonic booms as the exhaust gas
is expelled from the cylinder with a velocity exceeding the speed of sound. The
water pump impeller has spun 90 revolutions, sending 4 gallons of coolant
surging through the engine and radiators. The oil pumps have forced 47 fluid
ounces, roughly one-third gallon, of oil through the engine, oil cooler, and
oil tank, scavenging heat and lubricating the flailing machinery. The
supercharger rotor has completed 348 revolutions, it's rim spinning at Mach 1,
forcing 4.2 pounds or 55 ft3 of ambient air into the combustion chambers under
3 atmospheres of boost pressure. Around 9 fluid ounces of high octane aviation
fuel, 7843 BTU's worth of energy, has been injected into the carburetor along
with 5.3 fluid ounces of methanol/water anti-detonant injection fluid. Perhaps
1/8 fluid ounce of engine oil has been either combusted or blown overboard via
the crankcase breather tube. Over 1.65 million foot pounds of work have been
done, the equivalent of lifting a station wagon to the top of the Statue of
Liberty.
In that one second, the hard-running Merlin
has turned the propeller through 25 complete revolutions, with each of the
blade tips having arced through a distance of 884 feet at a rotational velocity
of 0.8 Mach. Fifteen fluid ounces of spray bar water has been atomized and
spread across the face of the radiator to accelerate the transfer of waste heat
from the cooling system to the atmosphere.
In that one second, the aircraft itself has
traveled 704 feet, close to 1/8 mile, or roughly 1.5% of a single lap. The
pilot's heart has taken 1.5 beats, pumping 5.4 fluid ounces of blood through
his body at a peak pressure of 4.7 inches of mercury over ambient pressure. Our
pilot happened to inspire during our measured second, inhaling approximately 30
cubic inches (0.5 liter) of oxygen from the on-board system, and 2.4 million,
yes million, new red blood cells have been formed in the pilot's bone marrow.
In just one second, an amazing sequence of
events have taken place beneath those polished cowlings and visored helmets.
It's the world's fastest motorsport. Don't blink!