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To clairify a few things:
My personal best in a full weight GSX (3,100ish lbs): 11.1 @ 126MPH. With a 20G and 550's. Don't believe everything you read online...
You were probably running race gas, right?
I was, but that has nothing to do with it at all. You boldly said 560's are not enough injector for 20G's, clearly, they were for me...
First I'll explain WHY I could do it:
I used a VPC / GCC, unlinke MAF translators or AFC's that manipulate the air flow signal to the ECU so to correct for extra air volume so that the ECU thinks the engine is operating in a normal state, un-aware of the extra fuel or air entering the engine. It's simple ratio's. You add 20% more air, 20% more injector, reduce the air flow the ECU see's by approximately 20%, and you have a reasonably happy engine and ECU. Much smaller injectors can be used in vehicles using stand alone ECU's or a VPC type computer that manipulates much more than air flow signal to achieve results.
To the "racegas" comment, although it does have a lot to do with why I could get a 3,100lb car to go 126MPH in the quarter, it has nothing to do with selection of injector sizing, at least not when compairing gasoline to racegas. All "gasoline" tpye fuels have roughly 114,000BTU's / gal. Various blends allow for some diviation, but more or less, that's where they all will be, regardless if it's 87 octane pump gas, or 118 octane C-16. To keep an engine for running to lean, you must add "X" amount of fuel per given amount of air. Explaining octane can be left for another day.
Now if we were talking about injectors required for a car running an alcohol based fuel, such as methanol, or ethanol, that would make a differance. For example E85, has a BTU rating of 81,000, or 71% of gasoline. That is why, as most of you know, vehicles will get anywhere between 20-30% fewer miles per gallon on E85, it's required that additional fuel be added to the engine (regardless of boost, compression ratio, etc, as it doesn't change in a flex fuel vehicle) to maintain propper air fuel ratio's. So you see, race gas really has nothing to do with it.
Ryan