Racepak, who's running one?
#1
Racepak, who's running one?
Just looking around and my car's finishing up and I'll be running a racepak to take place of a lot of gauges. Only gauges I'll have are boost, A/F, and one more I haven't decided on. Anyone with stories and/or opinions is much appreciated.
Last edited by hustler; 01-17-2012 at 06:24 PM.
#2
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Black car has one. I have no other gauges, everything is set on warnings (oil pres/temp, clt, iat, overboost, lean). I love the thing, it lets me actually focus on driving and keeps watch over the car for me. I pull all the data from the AEM EMS.
#3
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Sav, which dash do you have?
We have a G2X on the test bench. Have not put it in a car yet, but I'm impressed. It's more datalogger and supplemental display than full on dash replacement. Wouldn't mind getting my hands on a IQ3.
We have a G2X on the test bench. Have not put it in a car yet, but I'm impressed. It's more datalogger and supplemental display than full on dash replacement. Wouldn't mind getting my hands on a IQ3.
#4
We're a dealer and have them in most of our cars. Our current enduro car has a G2X with auxiliary fuel gauge. The prime enduro car (still being built) will be set up with an IQ3 including fuel level among other things.
Love the predictive function and lap counter in endurance racing.
Love the predictive function and lap counter in endurance racing.
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#12
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I've got an IQ3.
The IQ3 has a really awesome intelligent warning system - there's really no need to have extra gauges, ESPECIALLY down by the radio where you'll never look at them. I figured I would keep my wideband, but after getting the dash set up and programming everything in, I ended up ditching that gauge too. I've got boost and AFR fed in through the AEM, and I have a warning set up for each. The LEAN warning only comes on if AFR is over 12:1, and TPS is above 80%, and then only if those two things are true for more than 1 second (to prevent false warnings when snapping the throttle open).
For excessive awesome, you feed the AEM a VSS signal via the stock NB speed sensor, then route the VSS signal to the Racepak, then set the Racepak up to calculate wheelspin based on GPS speed vs. VSS speed. I haven't done this yet, but the NB sensor is in the tranny waiting for me.
That's just the channel monitoring/warnings awesomeness - it's also got 10hz GPS, GPS-based lap timing (no more beacons!), predictive lap timing, 3-axis accelerometer, triggers for external warnings, external buttons so you aren't reaching through the steering wheel to futz with stuff, fully programmable shift lights (programmable PER GEAR, so you can set the lights up to come on a bit earlier in lower gears to keep yourself out of the rev limiter), all the data dumps to a microSD card that plugs into the front of the dash, the list goes on and on. It's hard to bite the bullet, but as a diagnostic and data-collecting tool, it's amazing. There are very few products that I've purchased and been genuinely and fully impressed with, but the Racepak has definitely been one of them. My one gripe is that the software has a steep learning curve, but it's not impossible.
The Racepak V-Net sensor stuff is really pricey, but the availability of their USM boxes to take existing sensors makes it great. I'm setting an IQ3 up on our rental next week and alongside the AEM V-Net interface (which pulls virtually everything - boost, RPM, TPS, CLT, IAT, volts, 4 EGT channels, two WBO2 channels, VSS, and 3 custom AEM 5v inputs) I'm going to set up a USM box to handle the fuel gauge. I'll also add oil temp and oil pressure to the slew of stuff the AEM looks at, and I've got the option of feeding those 5v signals into the AEM or directly into the USM box.
Racepak IQ3 @ Trackspeed Engineering
The IQ3 has a really awesome intelligent warning system - there's really no need to have extra gauges, ESPECIALLY down by the radio where you'll never look at them. I figured I would keep my wideband, but after getting the dash set up and programming everything in, I ended up ditching that gauge too. I've got boost and AFR fed in through the AEM, and I have a warning set up for each. The LEAN warning only comes on if AFR is over 12:1, and TPS is above 80%, and then only if those two things are true for more than 1 second (to prevent false warnings when snapping the throttle open).
For excessive awesome, you feed the AEM a VSS signal via the stock NB speed sensor, then route the VSS signal to the Racepak, then set the Racepak up to calculate wheelspin based on GPS speed vs. VSS speed. I haven't done this yet, but the NB sensor is in the tranny waiting for me.
That's just the channel monitoring/warnings awesomeness - it's also got 10hz GPS, GPS-based lap timing (no more beacons!), predictive lap timing, 3-axis accelerometer, triggers for external warnings, external buttons so you aren't reaching through the steering wheel to futz with stuff, fully programmable shift lights (programmable PER GEAR, so you can set the lights up to come on a bit earlier in lower gears to keep yourself out of the rev limiter), all the data dumps to a microSD card that plugs into the front of the dash, the list goes on and on. It's hard to bite the bullet, but as a diagnostic and data-collecting tool, it's amazing. There are very few products that I've purchased and been genuinely and fully impressed with, but the Racepak has definitely been one of them. My one gripe is that the software has a steep learning curve, but it's not impossible.
The Racepak V-Net sensor stuff is really pricey, but the availability of their USM boxes to take existing sensors makes it great. I'm setting an IQ3 up on our rental next week and alongside the AEM V-Net interface (which pulls virtually everything - boost, RPM, TPS, CLT, IAT, volts, 4 EGT channels, two WBO2 channels, VSS, and 3 custom AEM 5v inputs) I'm going to set up a USM box to handle the fuel gauge. I'll also add oil temp and oil pressure to the slew of stuff the AEM looks at, and I've got the option of feeding those 5v signals into the AEM or directly into the USM box.
Racepak IQ3 @ Trackspeed Engineering
Last edited by Savington; 07-23-2011 at 10:46 PM.
#17
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The G2X Pro has a ton of channels and is probably targeted at serious pro teams. The normal G2X is around $700, which is a lot less expensive than the IQ3. The G2X will do RPM, speed, and all of the GPS/datalogging functions of the IQ3, with a less intricate dash.
Last edited by Savington; 08-05-2011 at 01:45 AM. Reason: fixing price inaccuracy