Hey Kevin, firstly, where did you get your info? If drag strips work that way nowadays (I wouldn't know how though...), then cool.
However, as far as I know and have researched, drag strips calculate the trap speed by giving the average speed of the last 66 feet. Yes, the average, hence the word "trap" not "top". You do not need 4 beams to calculate the average! Once you cross the first beam, the timer starts. Once you cross the last beam, the timer stops. Then you have, x number of seconds you were in the traps. Using this number, we get the average speed.
If the actual top speed can be calculated the way you said, then we wouldn't even need a beam 66 feet before the finish line. This is because we know the distance of the starting beam to the finish line, right? If we consider the starting beam the "first beam" and the finish line the "last beam", we still cannot calculate the top speed because it would be the average in the 1320! Believe me man, I didn't minor in math for nothing
You have to remember that all cars have different acceleration, where some are closer to linear, and others have clearly different growth rates. This is why the actual top speeds cannot be read unless you had a radar at the finish line.
BTW, this is what G-Tech uses as to what they claim sets them apart from the drag strip. It actually attempts to calculate the real top speed at the finish line, not the average speed at the traps.
However, as far as I know and have researched, drag strips calculate the trap speed by giving the average speed of the last 66 feet. Yes, the average, hence the word "trap" not "top". You do not need 4 beams to calculate the average! Once you cross the first beam, the timer starts. Once you cross the last beam, the timer stops. Then you have, x number of seconds you were in the traps. Using this number, we get the average speed.
If the actual top speed can be calculated the way you said, then we wouldn't even need a beam 66 feet before the finish line. This is because we know the distance of the starting beam to the finish line, right? If we consider the starting beam the "first beam" and the finish line the "last beam", we still cannot calculate the top speed because it would be the average in the 1320! Believe me man, I didn't minor in math for nothing
You have to remember that all cars have different acceleration, where some are closer to linear, and others have clearly different growth rates. This is why the actual top speeds cannot be read unless you had a radar at the finish line.
BTW, this is what G-Tech uses as to what they claim sets them apart from the drag strip. It actually attempts to calculate the real top speed at the finish line, not the average speed at the traps.
this isn't hard.



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