pumalex
Well-known member
yeah i have to agree with all of the above with the racedeck floor
............
That is my short list.![]()
I remember reading about the vector years ago in an obscure car magazine. I was about 8 or 9 years old and it was in a feature alongside a Keonig ferrari, comparing the driveability of each. I remember thinking what an advanced looking car the vector was for its time. The thing I never understood - even at a young age - was why they were equiped with automatic transmissions.
Given your history with the company, do you know why that was?
Really nice to see a piece of my childhood car-memory well cared for. And a great looking garage as well!
Matthew.

Thank you so much. I wasn't too keen on getting racedeck to begin with, it was just at my periphery.
I have two matco tool boxes: a 5 series three bay and a 7 series two bay. They're split up so much weight on a small footprint. But I do have milling machine, lathe for now, and god knows what else later. I didn't think racedeck would be a good idea for a machine shop application, but was sort of considering it for the fab section of my shop
Hi Matthew, Thanks for the complements on the garage and car. I still have a lot I want to do. As for the great transmission issue: The 3 speed automatic was chosen at the time because it could be built to handle the extreme horsepower and torque requirements needed by the Vectors engine. The engine will produce 1200hp at 14lbs of boost with 110 octane fuel. It generates 950lb ft of torque over a broad RPM range under those conditions. For longevity we built in a 2 times safety factor so the transmission components were designed to handle 2400hp and 1900 lb ft of torque. This allowed constant abuse from any driver without failure of the driveline. On 92 octane at 8lbs of boost (factory minimum setting) the engine produces 650hp and 649 lb ft of torque.
The other underlying factor was turbo boost. In a manual transmission car you push in the clutch, match rpm release clutch and back on the gas to shift. This causes boost levels to drop between shifts and sacrifices performance. With the automatic transmission (it has a ratchet shifter) you can hold boost levels between shifts and this improves 0-60 and 1/4 mile times tremendously. When you hit the gas in the Vector acceleration is constant and very linear. Power is always there.
The other issue was that no one made twin or triple disc clutches back then and no manual transmission could handle the torque.
The funniest thing now is that all performance cars have automatic transmissions that they allow you to shift with a paddle. And its cool to have a automatic transmission in your Tiptronic Porsche, ENZO Ferrari or Bugatti Veyron. In hindsight we were actually trend setters![]()
Thanks for the details - it's so great having someone who really knows these cars explain things. Even as a kid, I was really drawn to these and I remember something about the exclusivity really appealed to my 8 year old brain.
It makes sense re: transmission and horsepower. I wonder what effect on performance and driveability it would have to drop in a 'modern' day transmission with, like you said, a DSG box with flappy paddles. Maybe once your garage is all done, it could be your next project.....
Will be watching for updates on the car and garage.
Thanks for sharing,
Matthew

Hi there,I just have to say I love the Vector.I have ever since seeing the prototype in the '80's.one question though(feel free to answer or not)...is your name Greg?I have a friend on Facebook who was an engineer at Vector and was wondering if it was you?


WOW...... the photos in post #4 gave me a *****! Awesome garage and contents....love the vector!![]()

Very Nice!
Oh man, love to see this one bumped up again and a chance to look through the pics again. Any thoughts on getting a lift. Looks like the Vector would happily sit above the vette to clear some much needed space for you. Or more toys?![]()


Finally got a chance to read this thread. Thanks for sharing pics and info on your Vector.
For those who don't know vectorw8015 has a older thread on his Vector here:
http://garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=30553
For those who want to own a Vector now is your chance.
http://www.rmauctions.com/lots/lot.cfm?lot_id=1067559
Last one I saw for sale sold for around 125K in Europe. The link I posted says the car is going to be auctioned off for 300 to 500K! I'm wondering if they are saying that because it looks like its the exact car from the movie Rising Sun.
Vectorw8015- I never realized that the motor is transverse mounted. I know you guys opted to put automatic transmissions in the Vectors. You don't happen to have any pics of the trans bolted up to the engine do you? Is it safe to say the Vectors have independent rear suspension? My info would be appreciated.
Looking good! Liked the pic of Dugan too.
Jim
