307 RWHP is enough to get you into the low 13s.
307 rwhp using the 15% drivetrain loss shows 361 HP at the crank.
If your traps are in the low 100's, perhaps it is your shifting that needs work. 2.1 60 foots aren't that great, but they are not absolutely awful either. With that much power, you have a low 13 second car, *maybe* high 12's if everything goes right for you.
The trap speed shouldn't vary by driver ability - as long as the car is being pushed to its limit and shifted comparably. No matter what your 60 foot is, your trap speed will indicate the power of your car as long as your shifting is consistent. By this I mean, a better driver would likely not be able to squeeze out a higher trap speed than you, unless you aren't shifting with authority. I should ask... 6 speed or auto? If it is an auto, everything I just said is pretty irrelevant, lol...
Put a 2002 LS1 f-body on the dyno next to a 2002 C5 Vette, and the average difference in horsepower produced by the cars should turn out to be statistically insignificant if a large enough sample is used... at least this is what I have always been told.
Perhaps I'm wrong, but I just can't imagine a 2002 Firehawk struggled to hit 13's stock.
307 rwhp using the 15% drivetrain loss shows 361 HP at the crank.
If your traps are in the low 100's, perhaps it is your shifting that needs work. 2.1 60 foots aren't that great, but they are not absolutely awful either. With that much power, you have a low 13 second car, *maybe* high 12's if everything goes right for you.
The trap speed shouldn't vary by driver ability - as long as the car is being pushed to its limit and shifted comparably. No matter what your 60 foot is, your trap speed will indicate the power of your car as long as your shifting is consistent. By this I mean, a better driver would likely not be able to squeeze out a higher trap speed than you, unless you aren't shifting with authority. I should ask... 6 speed or auto? If it is an auto, everything I just said is pretty irrelevant, lol...
Put a 2002 LS1 f-body on the dyno next to a 2002 C5 Vette, and the average difference in horsepower produced by the cars should turn out to be statistically insignificant if a large enough sample is used... at least this is what I have always been told.
Perhaps I'm wrong, but I just can't imagine a 2002 Firehawk struggled to hit 13's stock.
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