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Written by Ian Wright
Megaladon is an extinct species of shark that lived millions of years ago. Scientists believe it was a big, powerful apex predator that targeted large prey, including dolphins and whales. It’s the perfect name for the supercharged Hemi-powered 1969 Camaro owned by Brent Austin. The big fish he’s targeting in this video from the National No Prep Racing Association’s YouTube channel is the Proline Racing 481x engined, and just as well named, Fireball Camaro driven by Ryan Martin.Details on the power Megaladon is making are, no doubt deliberately, thin on the ground. But we figure this all-out war machine should be in the 2,500 to 3,000 horsepower range with absurd torque figures to go with it. Not under a hood at all is a 565-inch big-block motor with 800 lb. injectors and a truly monstrous F3R ProCharger transferring that’s challenging a TH400 transmission to get the power to the tires.Fireball Camaro switched from an older Proline engine to the more reliable and near bulletproof PLR 481X for this year. You can actually buy a Fireball Camaro through a Chevy dealership and built by built by B&R Performance and Black Horse Racing. However, the 900 horsepower isn’t anywhere near this, surprisingly street-legal, barely guided missile of a race car. The race car runs on methanol and uses Precision Gen 2 Pro Mod turbochargers. The engine is full of engineering, but the final displacement is 572 cid. The compression ratio and bore/stroke combination are a closely guarded secret and, like Megaladon, so are the power output numbers. ALSO SEE: Driving the Camaro SS Hybrid of the Future The noise, the tire smoke and the times are no secret though. Both cars are phenomenal pieces of engineering and a challenge for anyone at the highest levels to go up against. The result here is close and it’s a fantastic race. We particularly enjoy Excited Team Guy as he realizes his driver had got the W.Join the LS1tech forums today!Tags: Camaro racing, Drag Racing, no prep
Date written: August 21, 2018
More of this article on the LS1 Tech website
ID: 13026
Megaladon is an extinct species of shark that lived millions of years ago. Scientists believe it was a big, powerful apex predator that targeted large prey, including dolphins and whales. It’s the perfect name for the supercharged Hemi-powered 1969 Camaro owned by Brent Austin. The big fish he’s targeting in this video from the National No Prep Racing Association’s YouTube channel is the Proline Racing 481x engined, and just as well named, Fireball Camaro driven by Ryan Martin.Details on the power Megaladon is making are, no doubt deliberately, thin on the ground. But we figure this all-out war machine should be in the 2,500 to 3,000 horsepower range with absurd torque figures to go with it. Not under a hood at all is a 565-inch big-block motor with 800 lb. injectors and a truly monstrous F3R ProCharger transferring that’s challenging a TH400 transmission to get the power to the tires.Fireball Camaro switched from an older Proline engine to the more reliable and near bulletproof PLR 481X for this year. You can actually buy a Fireball Camaro through a Chevy dealership and built by built by B&R Performance and Black Horse Racing. However, the 900 horsepower isn’t anywhere near this, surprisingly street-legal, barely guided missile of a race car. The race car runs on methanol and uses Precision Gen 2 Pro Mod turbochargers. The engine is full of engineering, but the final displacement is 572 cid. The compression ratio and bore/stroke combination are a closely guarded secret and, like Megaladon, so are the power output numbers. ALSO SEE: Driving the Camaro SS Hybrid of the Future The noise, the tire smoke and the times are no secret though. Both cars are phenomenal pieces of engineering and a challenge for anyone at the highest levels to go up against. The result here is close and it’s a fantastic race. We particularly enjoy Excited Team Guy as he realizes his driver had got the W.Join the LS1tech forums today!Tags: Camaro racing, Drag Racing, no prep
Date written: August 21, 2018
More of this article on the LS1 Tech website
ID: 13026