Suspension and Balance
Printed From: West Coast Fieros
Category: Technical Topics Forum
Forum Name: Technical Questions and Discussions
Forum Description: Got a technical question about your fiero? ask it here.
URL: http://www.westcoastfieros.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=2079
Printed Date: 04 December 2024 at 6:31pm Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 12.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com
Topic: Suspension and Balance
Posted By: Romeo
Subject: Suspension and Balance
Date Posted: 11 September 2010 at 10:06pm
Before I go in for my alignment, I had wanted to run some figures through my simulator to see if I can't make some improvements here or there. Please, feel free to respond if you have the answers to any of the following:
Weight split front-to-rear.
Centre of gravity in the y-axis (Height).
Toe spread at 100KM/H (Or if not, stock toe figure).
Stock spring rate.
Stock ride height.
Thanks in advance!
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Replies:
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 12 September 2010 at 12:04am
Weight distribution I think is 43/57. Not sure about CG, but you could approximate it by taking a height near the middle of the car but down a bit. There are a couple different springs you may have and I don't know your car well enough... but even if you knew what it was from the factory the springs will probably be softer from the age.
I'm not too sure how much a simulator would help. Even if you found the perfect numbers, the adjustments you can make are pretty limited and you likely won't get there without modifying your car.
Here's the stock alignment specs for 84-87:
Front camber +0.5 deg Front caster +5.0 deg Front toe +0.15 deg
Rear camber -1.0 deg Rear toe +0.15 deg
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 12 September 2010 at 9:56am
Thanks bud. And I'm thinking with a sensible amount of mods, camber should be tweakable. And toe is adjustable stock. I can't think of a way to dial in more caster, so I'll just have to learn to love it.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 12 September 2010 at 11:42am
One of the ways to get more camber adjustment is to replace your bushings with ones that have an offset centre so you can bring the whole control arm in or out. I'm not sure where you can find some though. If you find a different or better way I'd be interested in hearing about it.
For the caster, you can replace the two 6mm thick washers at the upper control arm with a bunch of smaller washers that give a total thickness of 12mm. Not perfect but it works.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 12 September 2010 at 12:07pm
Okie dokie. Thanks for the heads up Colby, I think I'm going to look into both of those, I like the concepts.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Dawg
Date Posted: 12 September 2010 at 3:30pm
Moog makes an adjustable upper ball joint for chamber.
The Dawg
Cheese wrote:
If you find a different or better way I'd be interested in hearing about it.
|
------------- You dream it up....I'll make it
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 12 September 2010 at 3:33pm
Dawg wrote:
Moog makes an adjustable upper ball joint for chamber. |
Don't confuse the boy. That would be "camber".
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 12 September 2010 at 4:01pm
Dawg wrote:
Moog makes an adjustable upper ball joint for chamber.
The Dawg
Cheese wrote:
If you find a different or better way I'd be interested in hearing about it.
|
|
I know, but those really don't provide enough adjustment if you want more negative camber, especially on a lowered car.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 12 September 2010 at 4:54pm
Dawg wrote:
Moog makes an adjustable upper ball joint for chamber.
The Dawg
Cheese wrote:
If you find a different or better way I'd be interested in hearing about it.
|
| Already have it, but it only adjusts within 0.5 degrees, which will not be adequate if the front is positive camber, seeing as how my preliminary results show that -0.4 degrees will allow the tires to roll over flat during heavy cornering.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 13 September 2010 at 2:00pm
Found a site http://www.d26.net/240sx/mirrors/Whiteline_WheelAlignmentTermsAndTheory.htm - Here with some good explanations and diagrams.
When I removed the rear struts on my '84 prior to chopping a couple coils off the springs, I discovered that there was one eccentric camber bolt on just one side. That didn't make any sense to me, so when I reassembled the rear suspension I used all regular strut mounting bolts instead.
Clynt and I then just did a "rough" camber and toe-in adjustment on the suspension (front and rear) when we put the cut springs back in. It's not bad, but I'd like to see if I can get it a bit more precise. I'll probably eventually take it into an alignment shop, but I'm curious to see how well it can be done at home.
For those of us who have lowered our suspension, how necessary is it to use eccentric camber bolts on the rear struts in order to preserve/adjust the correct camber?
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 13 September 2010 at 4:23pm
The mentions the primary issue with alot of positive caster being overcome by modern cars. It should be noted: It will not be corrected by our cars. The article was written for cars with power steering, something our cars lack. Any increased effort will be the driver's job to fight with our cars.
Caster makes the steering wheel hard to turn for two reasons: One, it directs the weight ahead of the tire patch, which causes the tires to want to stay straight. This can be demonstrated with, of all things, shopping cart. Push the cart normally; The tire will follow behind the pivot point, where the weight pushes down. Now, try and turn the wheel 180 degrees out and push forward. It will almost immediately spin around and continue to follow the weight instead. This is due to a phenominom called implied weight. The other reason caster makes the car harder to turn, is because you're essentially turning one tire "into the ground" and "lifting" the other tire. This can only really be thought of if one thinks in the extreme. Using the diagrams from the site, one can see that at zero degrees, the steering ONLY turns the tires. At forty-five degrees half the effort is to turn, the other half is applied to "turning the tire over" (Altering camber). At ninety degrees, the wheels wouldn't turn left or right, but only lean back and forth while still pointing forward.
It is that final "problem" which is also the most beneficial in terms of performance. By causing the tires to lean, this adds in negative camber, which helps correct for tire roll-over (The tires will try and lean opposite the direction the car turns) by adding negative camber to the outside tires, and adding positive camber to the inside tire, helping to flatten both out.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 13 September 2010 at 4:24pm
Patrick wrote:
For those of us who have lowered our suspension, how necessary is it to use eccentric camber bolts on the rear struts in order to preserve/adjust the correct camber?
|
I'm not completely sure, but I think those bolts just make adjusting it easier and aren't actually required.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 13 September 2010 at 4:29pm
I believe the use of eccentric camber bolts does offer more adjustment. However, they may or may not actually be required on lowered Fieros. (Probably depends on the amount of lowering that's been done.)
Colby, did you bother with them (even for just the added ease of adjustment)?
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 13 September 2010 at 5:31pm
I didn't bother with them, but I still might get some later on to make adjustment easier. The amount of camber adjustment you can get on the back of a stock Fiero seems to be just enough, the bigger issue is the front.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 13 September 2010 at 8:03pm
Alrighty, well, based upon word-of-mouth estimates on what the Fiero GT's spring rate is, I've plugged in the ride height, weight balance, roll-characteristics and tire type, and run through the simulation, and from the speeds at autocross (And highway) the best camber angle would be -0.9 degrees on the front and -1.7, which brings it to about .15 degrees front and -0.05 degrees rear under acceleration at 60MPH, 0 front and rear without acceleration or deceleration, -0.4 degrees front 0.1 degrees rear under deceleration.
The only thing that concerns me is running -1.7 degrees on a daily driven car... Begging for tire wear.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 13 September 2010 at 8:29pm
I'm a little confused... -0.9 deg front and -1.7 rear but "0 front and rear without acceleration or deceleration". Does that mean the the camber angles you list under acceleration/deceleration are just the change in the angles?
Those numbers are actually pretty close to what I tried to get my camber to, I just wasn't able to get the front camber where I wanted. On my car, rear is about -1.6 deg, front is -0.3 deg. I do mostly city driving so tire wear isn't as much of an issue for me.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 13 September 2010 at 8:37pm
No, the first figures are the static set rates, the last three are what will actually be translated at the bottom of the tire under the circumstances listed, due to caster, tire roll over and body roll.
And you don't find it wears quicker with the -1.6?
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 13 September 2010 at 8:47pm
Romeo wrote:
No, the first figures are the static set rates, the last three are what will actually be translated at the bottom of the tire under the circumstances listed, due to caster, tire roll over and body roll.
|
How can the camber be 0 deg under a constant velocity but -.9 and -1.7 deg when stationary? Is there really enough drag (and anything else I'm forgetting) at 60mph to cause the front end to lower and the rear end to get higher, and enough to cause that much change? Or is there something else happening?
Romeo wrote:
And you don't find it wears quicker with the -1.6? |
Not sure, I've only had it there for a couple weeks and less than 400km. I guess I'll find out eventually.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 13 September 2010 at 9:33pm
Cheese wrote:
Romeo wrote:
No, the first figures are the static set rates, the last three are what will actually be translated at the bottom of the tire under the circumstances listed, due to caster, tire roll over and body roll.
|
How can the camber be 0 deg under a constant velocity but -.9 and -1.7 deg when stationary? Is there really enough drag (and anything else I'm forgetting) at 60mph to cause the front end to lower and the rear end to get higher, and enough to cause that much change? Or is there something else happening?
Romeo wrote:
And you don't find it wears quicker with the -1.6? |
Not sure, I've only had it there for a couple weeks and less than 400km. I guess I'll find out eventually.
| I listed in my first one that it was during cornering at 60 MPH. That's where the dynamic change is coming from.
And alright. Will wear slower than the way I have it now anyways. lol
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 13 September 2010 at 9:41pm
Ah, that makes much more sense, I must have missed that part. In any case, it's reassuring to know that the numbers you came up with are pretty similar to what I tried to set my car to.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 13 September 2010 at 9:51pm
Yeah, you're spot on. If you want later, you can also send me your current ride height, tire type and roll-stiffness and I can run it through for you too.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 17 September 2010 at 5:58pm
Some trivial and useless facts for anyone who has nothing better to read:
As the Fiero is not in that racing simulator, I had to find another car with similar attributes. Some will find it comical that the closest analogue I could find was the Ferrari GTO. Same weight balance, same weight, same suspension height and a 2.9L V6 (Although given that it's a turbo six, it devellops over 300HP. Could put restrictors on it in-game, but it's just as easy to hold the gas at 70% throttle). I had to alter it's tires to match my Fiero's mind you.
The suspension set up still causes drastic oversteer if the rear stiffness exceeds the front. The can be slightly corrected by matching up the sway bars, or by increasing the stiffness of the front struts.
My idea of 275 back, 245 front will cause the car to have a neutral characteristics, unless the brakes are touched, in which case snap-oversteer is the result.
Peak lateral G's on my current tire set-up with that alignment will cause a peak lateral G of 1.04 at 60MPH, but it causes positive camber beyond that which means by 120MPH peak lateral G has diminished to .92
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 17 September 2010 at 6:53pm
I trekked out to Colby's place yesterday and we spent several hours setting up the alignment on my lowered '84. Gotta get ready to spank some Vettes on the 25th!
We spent a heck of a lot of time setting up the rear camber... Measure camber, jack car up, remove wheel, loosen two large strut mounting bolts, tweak camber, tighten two large strut mounting bolts, replace wheels, lower car, bounce car to settle springs, measure camber, rinse and repeat and repeat and repeat until the camber is where it’s supposed to be.
Next time we’ll try using these. I think it’ll make setting the rear camber a whole lot easier.
We didn't do any camber adjustment on the front because neither one of us was really sure which way the factory upper ball joints were supposed to be flipped around to tilt the tops of the wheels in a little more. Anyone know? (I believe one side on the ball joints has a "flat" edge that's either supposed to face in or out.) The front upper ball joints are probably already flipped around the "correct" way, but it would be nice to know for sure.
Anyway, the car feels really good after Colby's fine job as the rear camber was way off previously and the toe-in/out front and back is set up properly now.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 17 September 2010 at 9:21pm
Yeah, those bolts would have saved us a lot of time. If we had them, instead of having to jack the car up every time to adjust we probably could have just jacked it up once to loosen the bolts then adjusted it by turning the bolt with the wheel on the ground and raising again only to torque it in place. At least it's not something that needs to be done very often.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 17 September 2010 at 9:35pm
Romeo wrote:
Some trivial and useless facts for anyone who has nothing better to read:
As the Fiero is not in that racing simulator, I had to find another car with similar attributes. Some will find it comical that the closest analogue I could find was the Ferrari GTO. Same weight balance, same weight, same suspension height and a 2.9L V6 (Although given that it's a turbo six, it devellops over 300HP. Could put restrictors on it in-game, but it's just as easy to hold the gas at 70% throttle). I had to alter it's tires to match my Fiero's mind you.
The suspension set up still causes drastic oversteer if the rear stiffness exceeds the front. The can be slightly corrected by matching up the sway bars, or by increasing the stiffness of the front struts.
My idea of 275 back, 245 front will cause the car to have a neutral characteristics, unless the brakes are touched, in which case snap-oversteer is the result.
Peak lateral G's on my current tire set-up with that alignment will cause a peak lateral G of 1.04 at 60MPH, but it causes positive camber beyond that which means by 120MPH peak lateral G has diminished to .92 |
Which racing simulator is this?
How many G's do you figure you'll be able to reach at 30MPH? 30MPH is closer to the speed you'd be going in a turn for autox anyway. And what kind tire are you using for this simulator? Obviously the easiest way of increasing your max lateral acceleration is by getting soft, grippy tires.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 17 September 2010 at 11:19pm
Cheese wrote:
Romeo wrote:
...which means by 120MPH peak lateral G has diminished to .92
|
30MPH is closer to the speed you'd be going in a turn for autox...
|
Colby Colby Colby... Tristan fully intends to be rocketing through the autocross course at 120MPH after his engine mods.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 17 September 2010 at 11:54pm
To go 120MPH at .92g he'd need to have at least a 640m wide (in
diameter) turn. Maybe he wants to pave some more of the field for us.
But the largest turn I've seen has only used maybe 3/4 of the 250'
width, and when you consider that and assume a peak lateral acceleration
of 1.04g, you'll only be going at most 38MPH around a corner. Of course
some of the straights are just wide circles/arcs too.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 18 September 2010 at 2:22am
Cheese wrote:
Romeo wrote:
Some trivial and useless facts for anyone who has nothing better to read:
As the Fiero is not in that racing simulator, I had to find another car with similar attributes. Some will find it comical that the closest analogue I could find was the Ferrari GTO. Same weight balance, same weight, same suspension height and a 2.9L V6 (Although given that it's a turbo six, it devellops over 300HP. Could put restrictors on it in-game, but it's just as easy to hold the gas at 70% throttle). I had to alter it's tires to match my Fiero's mind you.
The suspension set up still causes drastic oversteer if the rear stiffness exceeds the front. The can be slightly corrected by matching up the sway bars, or by increasing the stiffness of the front struts.
My idea of 275 back, 245 front will cause the car to have a neutral characteristics, unless the brakes are touched, in which case snap-oversteer is the result.
Peak lateral G's on my current tire set-up with that alignment will cause a peak lateral G of 1.04 at 60MPH, but it causes positive camber beyond that which means by 120MPH peak lateral G has diminished to .92
|
Which racing simulator is this?
How many G's do you figure you'll be able to reach at 30MPH? 30MPH is closer to the speed you'd be going in a turn for autox anyway. And what kind tire are you using for this simulator? Obviously the easiest way of increasing your max lateral acceleration is by getting soft, grippy tires.
| Forza is the simulator.
I can check that tomorrow night, didn't really grab that. 60MPH was the highest I managed to get last time, so I set that as my "worry up to this level" point.
I'm only using my street tires. I could put in really nice, grippy semi-slicks, but that's beyond my budget. Far, far beyond it.
And you know it will Patty.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 18 September 2010 at 11:07am
If you could do 1.04g with street tires, imagine what you'd be able to do with a dedicated autox tire. Are you getting there with just a better alignment, wider tires, and balancing the stiffness between the front and rear? I hope that the simulator is correct.
With my car, because of how slowly it accelerates, maximizing the speed I can go around corners is very important. I don't think I even reached 50MPH last time, but if I could carry that much speed through the largest turns I'd be much better off. But until I learn to take full advantage of the grip I have available to me now, increasing it won't do as much for me, just hide my mistakes.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 18 September 2010 at 9:31pm
You might be even better off than I am, as the duke surely weighs less than the six. But the next level of tire I can input is a street-legal slick, not unlike what Brian utilizes. However, I simply don't have the fiscal ability to afford changing tires more frequently.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 18 September 2010 at 9:59pm
Well, I've noticed that Koni Reds are only adjustable on the rear... This is problematic, as the only place with the now discontinued Koni yellows are Westcoastfiero, who want $499 for the front axle alone.
Oh well, still planning on picking them up, need to try and balance out finances and figure something out... Don't want anything less.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 19 September 2010 at 12:48am
Romeo wrote:
Well, I've noticed that Koni Reds are only adjustable on the rear...
This is problematic, as the only place with the now discontinued Koni
yellows are Westcoastfiero, who want $499 for the front axle alone. |
You sure about that? The http://www.koni-na.com/cat_search.cfm?mt_id=1&my_year=1986&mak_id=36&mod_id=445&submit.x=23&submit.y=2&submit=Search - Koni website shows that the red shocks for 84-87's are adjustable. You can even buy a pair of them there for $258.
Hopefully you can find some adjustable shocks for less than $499 since I was planning on getting some myself too in the future, just not if they're that pricey.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 19 September 2010 at 9:35am
Cheese wrote:
You can even buy a pair of them there for $258. |
And a quick google search shows them to be had for http://www.horsepowerfreaks.com/cart///13655 - $105 apiece , probably less elsewhere.
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 19 September 2010 at 12:08pm
From what every site I've read says, the fronts can be adjusted outside of the vehicle, but that doesn't much help me. The rears are still externally adjustable, meaning that you can reach in the tire well and stiffen/softer bounce jounce and rebound settings without taking anything out. The Koni yellows, which are both stiffer and adjustable at all four corners, are worth about half of what I paid for the car. The reds are a little softer (But still plenty stiff), but can only be adjusted (Normally) on the rear, and still arn't what you'd call "cheap". Also, the fronts are usually $110-130 per shock, and the backs about $200-240 each (For the reds).
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 19 September 2010 at 1:11pm
OK... but you seem to be forgetting something. In general, for maximum cornering traction, you want the least amount of vertical force/weight at each wheel. Of course other factors come in like body roll and alignment.
If this doesn't make sense to you, consider what happens when you add a large rear anti sway bar to a stock Fiero. A stock Fiero understeers a lot (ie. the front wheels lose traction). Adding a large rear sway bar, in addition to taking away body roll, effectively increases the amount of downward force on the rear wheels and results in a car that will more readily oversteer. Since it hasn't really given the front wheels any more traction while corning, it must have taken away traction from the rear of the car. So with this in mind, you can just take the front shocks and set them to the softest setting then just tune the rear struts for balanced handling.
Edit: Now that I think about it, using the sway bar as the example probably wasn't the best choice since the fact that it increases the weight at the wheels isn't so obvious. But it seems like you already get that to make an understeering car more neutral you want to stiffen the rear. I'm just suggesting you consider why that is and why a totally stiff suspension isn't necessarily ideal if you want to maximize cornering traction (for example, instead of stiffening the rear to eliminate understeer, make the front softer).
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 20 September 2010 at 9:30am
Bare in mind that friction is dominated by normal force, which itself is generated by how much the car is "pushing" on a tire. While it's true over-stiffening can aversely affect a car's handling, a softer suspension is bad in three ways:
Driver confidence will naturally go down as body lean is increased. This unto itself is probably a soft shocks single greatest sin.
The second reason is transverse balance. In a car that's leaning, there's too much weight to handle on the outside tire, and not enough weight to get friction on the inside tire.
Third reason being momentum. As the car leans over, it wants to continue moving to the outside. Off-setting this is key to cornering quicker.
Remember, the fastest cornering vehicles on the planet - Formula One vehicles - Are also one of the stiffest, with a suspension capable of deflecting only 1/2" at 5 g's.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 20 September 2010 at 11:49am
Romeo wrote:
Bare in mind that friction is dominated by normal force, which itself is generated by how much the car is "pushing" on a tire. |
Believe me, I'm very aware of this and the fact that it seems wrong when dealing with a vehicle's corning ability bugs me. Remember though that Newton's laws aren't always correct so I can only conclude this is one of those cases where they don't apply very well, at least until I learn more.
Romeo wrote:
Driver confidence will naturally go down as body lean is increased. This
unto itself is probably a soft shocks single greatest sin. |
I completely agree with this.
Romeo wrote:
The second reason is transverse balance. In a car that's leaning,
there's too much weight to handle on the outside tire, and not enough
weight to get friction on the inside tire.
Third reason being momentum. As the car leans over, it wants to continue
moving to the outside. Off-setting this is key to cornering quicker. |
I'm not suggesting you build a car with excessive lean, just that saving yourself a bunch of money by going with the Koni reds may not be such a bad thing. If I had them, I would just set the shocks to their softest setting then adjust the rear struts until the car had more or less neutral steering. If I found there was too much roll or understeering still, then I would change the sway bars. I don't have enough experience to tell you for certain that doing it like that would be the best way, but it seems like it should at least be a fairly good way. Ultimately it's your car and your decision and I'm just telling you what I'd do if I had enough extra money to afford it. At least with the adjustable shocks and struts you can play with the overall stiffness a bit and decide what you like more.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 20 September 2010 at 12:09pm
That's more or less what I'm going for. I've been back on the simulator, and at the moment I'm trying to tune the shocks to find the behavior I want, as well as keeping an eye on the lateral g rating.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 12:01am
Some good reading relating to this topic http://www.fiero.nl/forum/Archives/Archive-000001/HTML/20031110-2-039385.html - here (specifically, shark93726 and Monza76's posts have good info). And finally I find some kind of explanation as to why softer suspensions can improve grip:
shark93726 wrote:
The improvement in traction is obtained
because with softer suspension rate, the tires are better able to follow
little bumps and jiggles in the road without losing traction. (If the
surface of the road were absolutely smooth, then there would be no need
to soften suspensions, and a go-cart with no suspension would stick as
well as suspened cars) |
The more I learn the more I appreciate how complicated of a subject this is.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 11:47am
Cheese wrote:
Some good reading relating to this topic http://www.fiero.nl/forum/Archives/Archive-000001/HTML/20031110-2-039385.html - here (specifically, shark93726 and Monza76's posts have good info). |
That is a very informative thread.
After reading it I suspect the lowered (and very stiff) suspension on my '84 now actually contributes to perhaps worse handling than stock, but you know what Johnny Boy says...
"It doesn't have to perform, it just has to look good."
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 12:08pm
Colby, I've lost track now of all the links that have been presented, but I imagine you've seen http://ironduke7.tripod.com/Handling.htm - This page (by Ira Crummey) and all the other pages it links to?
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 12:17pm
Cheese wrote:
Some good reading relating to this topic http://www.fiero.nl/forum/Archives/Archive-000001/HTML/20031110-2-039385.html - here (specifically, shark93726 and Monza76's posts have good info). And finally I find some kind of explanation as to why softer suspensions can improve grip:
shark93726 wrote:
The improvement in traction is obtained because with softer suspension rate, the tires are better able to follow little bumps and jiggles in the road without losing traction. (If the surface of the road were absolutely smooth, then there would be no need to soften suspensions, and a go-cart with no suspension would stick as well as suspened cars) |
The more I learn the more I appreciate how complicated of a subject this is.
| This is a bit misleading, as repeatative bumps will still prefer a stiff suspension for performance (Listen to LMP crew chiefs. When racing at a place like Sebring they actually dial in more rebound stiffness). Remember, the suspension is what pushes the tires back down after they go up from a bump. You don't want to skip along the surface, but you don't want to continuously rock up and down either. Another example is Formula 1: They almost never soften the suspension, even on rough tracks like Mugello or Sebring. And the perfectly smooth comment is... Well, it's wrong. Go-Karts very easily lose traction, thanks to their utter lack of suspension, and that's on nice, glass-smooth tracks. Remember, the car doesn't want to turn a corner - it wants to continue straight. The suspension is sort of the comprimise to this behavior. Without it, the car will VERY easily spin out, regardless of road condition.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 12:38pm
Romeo wrote:
...repeatative bumps |
Are those anything like repetitive bumps?
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 3:23pm
Patrick wrote:
Colby, I've lost track now of all the links that have been presented, but I imagine you've seen http://ironduke7.tripod.com/Handling.htm - This page (by Ira Crummey) and all the other pages it links to? |
Yes, and it looks like Monza76 (one of the people I pointed out in the thread I linked to) is actually the author of that site.
Romeo wrote:
This is a bit misleading, as repeatative bumps will still
prefer a stiff suspension for performance (Listen to LMP crew chiefs.
When racing at a place like Sebring they actually dial in more rebound
stiffness). Remember, the suspension is what pushes the tires back down
after they go up from a bump. You don't want to skip along the surface,
but you don't want to continuously rock up and down either. Another example is Formula 1: They almost never soften the
suspension, even on rough tracks like Mugello or Sebring. |
Consider rally cars, they tend to have softer suspensions and they have to deal with way more bumps than pretty much any other kind of car.
Romeo wrote:
And the
perfectly smooth comment is... Well, it's wrong. Go-Karts very easily
lose traction, thanks to their utter lack of suspension, and that's on
nice, glass-smooth tracks. Remember, the car doesn't want to turn a
corner - it wants to continue straight. The suspension is sort of the
comprimise to this behavior. Without it, the car will VERY easily spin
out, regardless of road condition. |
It seems to me to be more an approximation of the truth rather than totally wrong, there is always more to it.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 4:16pm
It's a common misconception that rally cars have soft suspension. Rally cars have soft shocks, and a tall suspension, but it isn't soft by any stretch of the imagination. And rally sort of follows it's own special guidelines, as the tires will spin before body roll becomes an issue. Like I said, the best approximation is the unpaved air-strip section of Sebring, or the two straights after the main straight of Monza. They're rough as sin, but during those races crew chiefs do not scale back stiffness.
I understand that point on a daily driven vehicle, as when dealing with bumps it's nice if the car soaks up some of the shock, rather than your vertibrae, but performance almost always favours a suspension that is supple enough to let the tires bite down, but stiff enough to fight the car from leaning over too much. And looking at the simulator results, I have a long way to go before that becomes problematic. Hell, even the Koni yellows look like they'd have a tough time being that bad.
And yes Patrick, I think I was caught between wanting to type repeating and repetitive and ended up with both.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 4:26pm
Romeo wrote:
And yes Patrick, I think I was caught between wanting to type repeating and repetitive and ended up with both. |
That's okay, you just invented a new word!
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 5:27pm
Yeah, I'm pretty gnarley like that.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 5:42pm
Romeo wrote:
Like I said, the best approximation is the unpaved air-strip section of
Sebring, or the two straights after the main straight of Monza. They're
rough as sin, but during those races crew chiefs do not scale back
stiffness. |
I'm not familiar with those tracks or even very familiar with Formula 1 in general, but if it's the straights that are rough then they wouldn't care about increasing cornering power for those sections. Even if they're not straights, would you sacrifice traction on every other part of the track just so you can go faster around just a couple of the corners? I wouldn't.
Romeo wrote:
... but performance almost always favours a suspension that is supple enough
to let the tires bite down, but stiff enough to fight the car from
leaning over too much. |
That's more or less what I've been saying all along. A stock Fiero doesn't seem to have too much lean, so making the front softer rather than making the rear stiffer should result in a car that has more traction while cornering. I made the mistake of not doing enough research before I bought some of my suspension parts and so I've taken potential traction away from both ends of my car.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 6:08pm
Cheese wrote:
Romeo wrote:
Like I said, the best approximation is the unpaved air-strip section of Sebring, or the two straights after the main straight of Monza. They're rough as sin, but during those races crew chiefs do not scale back stiffness. |
I'm not familiar with those tracks or even very familiar with Formula 1 in general, but if it's the straights that are rough then they wouldn't care about increasing cornering power for those sections. Even if they're not straights, would you sacrifice traction on every other part of the track just so you can go faster around just a couple of the corners? I wouldn't.
Romeo wrote:
... but performance almost always favours a suspension that is supple enough to let the tires bite down, but stiff enough to fight the car from leaning over too much. |
That's more or less what I've been saying all along. A stock Fiero doesn't seem to have too much lean, so making the front softer rather than making the rear stiffer should result in a car that has more traction while cornering. I made the mistake of not doing enough research before I bought some of my suspension parts and so I've taken potential traction away from both ends of my car.
| The two straights at Monza are still seperated by a left kink, and Sebring is a sweeping right-hander.
Mine does (If you saw at autocross). Although an anti-sway bar may help, it will not totally alleviate the issue. Whatever the weak link in the Fiero's traction is, I'm going to try and concentrate on that until everything is flat as a board around the corners (If I have to Delrin - I will).
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 6:54pm
Cheese wrote:
A stock Fiero doesn't seem to have too much lean... |
While I was watching Tristan slipping and sliding around the track during his final run at the last autocross , I overheard a fella who was also watching talking to his buddy. What he said was something like this...
"Those Fieros go pretty good, but the problem with them is that they lean over so much in the corners."
Seriously, that's what the guy was saying!
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 7:13pm
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 21 September 2010 at 8:12pm
Well, I'm off to play with the simulator some more. Get as close as I can to perfection before applying all this to the real world.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 22 September 2010 at 12:04am
Found in the book Chassis Engineering by Herb Adams (interesting parts highlighted in red):
and
In other words, make your suspension as soft as you're able to, given the conditions. Then if you need to, add anti-sway bars to limit roll.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 22 September 2010 at 12:16am
Cheese wrote:
In other words, make your suspension as soft as you're able to... |
So Colby, do you think Herb would approve of the lowered, rather stiff front suspension on my '84?
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 22 September 2010 at 12:23am
Well, he seems to advocate cutting springs, but you've really increased the stiffness of yours by cutting two coils. What you could do in the future if you want to make them slightly softer is to find some 85-87 springs and cut off just a single coil instead of two.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 12:03pm
Patrick wrote:
Cheese wrote:
A stock Fiero doesn't seem to have too much lean... |
While I was watching Tristan slipping and sliding around the track during his final run at the last autocross , I overheard a fella who was also watching talking to his buddy. What he said was something like this...
"Those Fieros go pretty good, but the problem with them is that they lean over so much in the corners."
Seriously, that's what the guy was saying!
|
I've been thinking about this a bit and I think I have a better idea of why someone might say that. A stiffer car with little lean will give you a bit more of an instant response to your steering inputs as well as maybe being slightly easier to drive, and in an autox course there are often some sections with lots of tight turns where that could really help, and more traction won't help at all in those situations.
The way I see it though, you're not spending very much time in those sections, and often there are one or more large sweeping turns where you will be spending a lot more of your time in, so if you can go slightly faster around them (due to increased grip) that should result in a faster time overall. Plus I feel a skilled driver might be able to cope with a bit more body roll and less instant response in the tighter parts and go through them about as quick as the guy in the stiffer car with only a bit of roll.
Does that make sense?
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 3:36pm
Cheese wrote:
Does that make sense? |
Theory all goes out the window Saturday once we're on the track.
Reflexes and luck will be playing a huge role. A good wheel alignment doesn't hurt either.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 4:24pm
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 4:28pm
All I'm worried about is being able to follow the course. I don't want to get lost out there like I did on my first run at the last autocross.
I was holding back quite a bit last time (being my first autocross and not being familiar with how the car was going to feel while being pushed). I was probably braking too early and starting my turns too late.
I suspect I'll be hitting more than one cone tomorrow.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 4:31pm
lol, study the course well, you'll do fine. At the very least if you get lost, you won't be the only one.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: kharmata
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 5:43pm
obviously someone has thought of how the amount of body
roll relates to the amount of camber on each wheel and how
it changes the tires parallelness to the ground - not too
mention adding or subtracting the amount of tire sway as a
result of all the centrifugal forces as you whip around the
corner...which varies the pressure of the rubber to the
ground at any one point along the contact area...
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 6:02pm
kharmata wrote:
obviously someone has thought of how the amount of body
roll relates to the amount of camber on each wheel and how
it changes the tires parallelness to the ground - not too
mention adding or subtracting the amount of tire sway as a
result of all the centrifugal forces as you whip around the
corner...which varies the pressure of the rubber to the
ground at any one point along the contact area... |
Back on the first page Tristan was collecting data to help determine the best alignment for him, and the camber issue might have come up then. Getting any kind of negative camber out of the front is troublesome, so less roll does mean that's less of an issue.
I don't know if either of us considered the issue of pressure of the rubber to the ground changing along the contact patch during hard corning. Setting the camber correctly should minimize anything like that, don't you think?
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: kharmata
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 6:40pm
Cheese wrote:
don't you think?
|
As much as possible sometimes. other times not! I actually dont have any practical experience in the matter - it's all pretty much theory at this point for me. I was just trying to make a point that there are many factors to consider and probably many we aren't aware of.
Cheers!
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 8:19pm
You do make a good point.
I'm taking physics at university right now, and basically you start out
learning rough approximations of the truth. Slowly you consider more
factors and have to take them into account which helps your
approximations get better. Then you learn that the laws you were using
are actually wrong in many cases (but still good approximations in many
other cases) and so you must learn theories which approach the problem a
bit differently. I have approached learning suspension and handling
in a similar way, looking at the basics (eg. what happens when the shock
gets stiffer/softer, and why?) and slowly learning more and taking more
things into consideration. I know I have a lot more to learn about,
though at this point I'm not too sure what I'm not aware of.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Capt Fiero
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 8:32pm
I don't mean to shoot anyone in the foot here, but you guys do realize when it comes to driving a car, even the biggest best race teams in the world are still only doing a "best guess" when they set a car up, they don't know if it works until the driver comes back and says change this or that, and most of what they "know" works, is from real track trials and errors. Some of the best drivers in the world simply get in and drive, then tweak the car till it suits them. Hence why on the same track you may have 100 different variations of the setup of nearly identical cars. If science could tell us the "best" way to setup a car...................... lets just say life would be a lot less interesting.
------------- Capt Fiero
88 Fiero GT 5spd V6
Eight Fifty Seven GT V8 5spd.
|
Posted By: kharmata
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 9:16pm
Capt Fiero wrote:
I don't mean to shoot anyone in the foot here, |
Owwwwwwwwww don't burst our theoretical bubbles now. It's all in good fun and learning of course.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 9:23pm
Being able to do a "best guess" is all I'm really aiming for. And you're right, the tweaks should be the drivers choice, they're the ones out there driving it and experiencing it so they have a better idea than anyone else as to what needs to be changed. Though I suspect the best drivers in the world do have some knowledge of their car's suspension and are informed enough to make the right decision for tweaking. After all, I don't think they became the best by being lazy and not learning about what their car is doing on the track and why it behaves that way.
So no feet were shot over here.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 24 September 2010 at 11:11pm
You are right, of course, David, theory only goes so far. Anything specific is simply luck-of-the-draw, but with the amount of money in simulators these days... Hell, there's a $15000 engine simulator on the market which can tell you damn near EVERYTHING about any engine you plug in - real or hypothetical. There's significantly less guesswork than before. For example, I used Forza to find a similar car (Intake-Restricted Ferrari GTO) and then tweaked what was already available to see what would occur with my Fiero. I'm not saying in the real world -1.7 on the rear will be perfect, but it will be bloody close. This is besides the fact though, as suspension has always been a comprimise. What works well on Tsukuba will not work well on Mugello.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 25 September 2010 at 9:58pm
After watching Tristan going around the cones today and seeing how loose his suspension is out there, I can totally agree with the comment Patrick shared (though not so much with the generalization that all Fieros have the problem):
"Those Fieros go pretty good, but the problem with them is that they lean over so much in the corners." |
Also, I decided to try the autox without a rear sway bar. It's hard to say whether it was better or worse since I was using different tires than I'm used to. I could really feel the additional roll, though, and when I installed it back before the autox season started, I couldn't tell a difference. I think that says something about how my driving skills are improving - I can now actually consistently reach my limits of traction and am more aware of what the car is doing, finding the quickest line is next.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 25 September 2010 at 11:41pm
Yeah, without the struts to keep them in check, spring stiffness becomes pretty much irrelevent. Still damn fun out there though, despite Gretchin's misaligned feet.
Time to pony up for Koni (RHYME).
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 26 September 2010 at 12:12am
I had a GPS in the car with me logging data so I have some numbers for you. Admittedly a GPS is not the best way to find lateral acceleration, but at least it's something.
Previously, my max lateral g's were around 0.81-0.84, this time I found I was doing the sweepers somewhere around 0.73g max. So without a rear sway bar and on winter tires, I lost roughly 0.1g of cornering power. Whether or not it was the sway bar or tires, I don't know. I did notice a bit more understeer so the car was less balanced, and the tires, while slightly softer, had less surface area in contact with the road due to the narrower width and the tread pattern. I think though that I need to find a way to soften the front if I'm going run without a rear bar, or alternatively find a smaller diameter rear bar somewhere.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 26 September 2010 at 12:35am
Oh, buddy, let me know next time you're doing a run, my iTouch has a program for acceleration, deceleration and lateral G's, and if it knows your weight (As close as you think it is as race time) and gearing, it'll also tell you your horsepower estimate based upon acceleration figures.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 26 September 2010 at 12:54am
Can it log it? I don't need the distraction as I'm driving but if I can look at it later that would be perfect. My brother has an iPod touch he's not using since he got an iPhone so there's one lying around here I could use, thanks for the offer though.
I had actually considered at one point to use a Wii remote to log acceleration, but I got lazy when it appeared as though the GPS was giving me fairly consistent numbers.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 26 September 2010 at 8:31am
Yep, you can log it of course. GPS is probably better anyways, as it's a hard mount. With the iTouch, you need to tape it to the centre console.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Dawg
Date Posted: 26 September 2010 at 10:09am
That's easy, just modify the one you have now. Take it off the car and grind the diameter down between the body mounts. I can show you how if you'd like.
We used to do this all the time in my racing days.
DG
Cheese wrote:
or alternatively find a smaller diameter rear bar somewhere.
|
------------- You dream it up....I'll make it
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 26 September 2010 at 10:56am
Dawg wrote:
That's easy, just modify the one you have now. Take it off the car and grind the diameter down between the body mounts. I can show you how if you'd like.
We used to do this all the time in my racing days.
DG
Cheese wrote:
or alternatively find a smaller diameter rear bar somewhere.
|
|
I had considered doing something like that, but wasn't sure if the shape mattered (if it had to be more or less perfectly round), and if it did, I didn't know how I would accomplish that.
I should have several months before the PCA autoxes start back up so I have time to save up some money if I want adjustable shocks... though I'm kind of tempted to go to some of the slush series events UBCSCC puts on.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 26 September 2010 at 8:50pm
Slush series! Time to bring out the Sierra. THAT will be fun.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 03 October 2010 at 11:16pm
So I've been doing some reading (mostly reading the http://sports.groups.yahoo.com/group/FieroRacingList/ - Fiero Racing List ) on this topic and related things over the past few days and have a few more things to share.
First,
specifically for autocross, make sure you're not making a change
that'll put you into a class where you'll be horribly uncompetitive.
Take a look at the http://www.scca.com/documents/Solo_Rules/2010_scca_solo_rules.pdf - SCCA solo rules
for classing info. At the end of the day for the more serious autocross
clubs, your best time is adjusted by a ratio so cars of different
levels can be compared a bit better. Just as an example, my car can fit
in either HS (H Stock) or if I make changes to it, FSP (F Street
Prepared), and there's further levels too. On a 50 second run, if my car
is in FSP rather than HS I basically suffer a 1.75 second penalty, and I
don't think I could improve my car that much without spending a
significant amount of money on mods. If you just want to have fun this
doesn't matter and you can just compare raw times (like what PCA does),
but I want to see if I can make me and my car a bit more competitive.
This
means I need to lose a few of the changes I've made to my car, like the
cut springs and polyurethane sway bar bushings and end links (you're
also not allowed a rear sway bar). But after a bit of reading, that may
not actually be a bad thing. Aside from having lost some potential
negative camber from cutting the front springs, apparently it also puts
the front suspension geometry into a range where much more toe changes
occurs resulting in more bump steer and after driving my car with cut
springs, I think I have felt this. So although my ride height increases,
I should be able to reduce understeer slightly with more negative
camber and that may actually give me a slightly better handling car.
Since I won't be allowed to spend a bunch of money on upgrading my
suspension in the stock class (aside from a few things), I should be
able to invest in some nicer tires which are the biggest single upgrade
you can make to the handling anyway. If I get tires with a slightly
smaller diameter (which I think are allowed), that will effectively
lower the car back down to where it was before, too.
Unfortunately, your options for reducing body roll in the stock class
are extremely limited so I may be forced to use a larger front sway bar
which could make understeer a bit worse, although it would mean I
require less negative camber so it could also help me. I don't know.
I'm stuck in FSP until I can do something about my 16" rims though, and I
still need to actually go to one of the UBC events to make sure I like
it, otherwise none of this matters as much. I do want more seat time though.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 04 October 2010 at 12:11am
Cheese wrote:
This means I need to lose a few of the changes I've made to my car, like the cut springs... |
There's no way I'd return my '84 to the "bush-buggy" look just to comply with the totally stock class in autocross. I hate the huge wheel-well gaps that all stock Fieros have, especially the 84's which were the worst of the lot. I don't want my Fieros looking, ummm... silly.
I don't know if V6 Fieros are in a different class in autocross than the duke powered ones, or if there's some "penalty" to even things out, but if I was serious about autocross and wanted to be competitive, I wouldn't be driving a duke. There just isn't enough GO power when the gas pedal is pressed to the floor.
Having said that, I have no idea how Colby and I managed to stay competitive with the V6 Fieros (except for Brian of course) at the last autocross. When I watch the videos and see the GTs accelerating at the start and coming out of the corners, I'm not sure why Colby and I with our 4-bangers weren't blown out of the water. Doesn't mean I didn't have fun though, it was a blast!
|
Posted By: Colby
Date Posted: 04 October 2010 at 12:37am
Patrick wrote:
... if I was serious about autocross and wanted to be competitive, I wouldn't be driving a duke. |
Yeah, I'm in a slightly unique situation since I've invested so much money into my car to make it a good daily driver, I'd lose a lot if I sold the car and got a Fiero with a V6, so I'm stuck working with what I have.
Patrick wrote:
Having said that, I have no idea how Colby and I managed to stay
competitive with the V6 Fieros (except for Brian of course) at the last
autocross. When I watch the videos and see the GTs accelerate at the
start and coming out of the corners, I'm not sure why Colby and I with
our 4-bangers weren't blown out of the water. Doesn't mean I didn't have fun though, it was a blast! |
There was only really a single main straight where there was a significant difference, the rest was down to handling and how fast you could make it around the sweepers and rest of the course. Watch Brian's GT and you'll see he goes way faster around the rest of the course beyond the straight section than any of us, I bet a properly setup Duke powered Fiero could be able to do that with a good driver. This is why trying to make my Duke a bit more competitive doesn't seem that crazy to me. There are even courses with almost no straight sections and I feel those are where the gap can get really narrow between the 4 cyl and v6 Fieros.
Patrick wrote:
There's no way I'd return my '84 to the "bush-buggy" look just to comply
with the totally stock class in autocross. I hate the huge wheel gaps
that all stock Fieros have, especially the 84's which were the worst of the lot. I don't want my Fieros looking, ummm... silly. |
Don't worry about it then if you decide to go an event where that classing is used. Everyone can still compare times with each other and you can always pretend you're in HS when comparing final results (which is what I intend to do before I get the proper tires). The classing thing is a bit annoying in some cases, but whatever, it'll still be a lot of fun.
------------- 88 Formula 5 speed
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 04 October 2010 at 12:52am
Cheese wrote:
There was only really a single main straight where there was a significant difference... |
Oh, I don't know if I completely agree with that comment Colby, but I know what you're getting at.
I guess I just miss the power and the instant neck-snapping throttle response and the wonderful SOUND that I had years ago with my various high performance V8 Chevys.
Perhaps I'm going through a mid-life crisis.
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 04 October 2010 at 7:51am
427 cubes of fun are waiting for you Patty... Drop it in the back of your Fiero.
LS7 win, baby.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 04 October 2010 at 8:06pm
Patrick wrote:
Cheese wrote:
There was only really a single main straight where there was a significant difference... |
Oh, I don't know if I completely agree with that comment Colby, but I know what you're getting at.
I guess I just miss the power and the instant neck-snapping throttle response and the wonderful SOUND that I had years ago with my various high performance V8 Chevys.
Perhaps I'm going through a mid-life crisis.
| By the way, mid-life crisis? You intend to live until you're 196?
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 04 October 2010 at 8:19pm
Romeo wrote:
By the way, mid-life crisis? You intend to live until you're 196? |
"196"...
For a 98 year old geezer, my duke and I didn't do too bad against you and Gretchin at the autocross.
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 05 October 2010 at 12:21am
Still lost.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 05 October 2010 at 12:32am
Romeo wrote:
Still lost. |
Yes, you most certainly appear to be. It's those power drinks you consume. They're over-revving your brain cells and causing temporal oscillations.
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 05 October 2010 at 8:55am
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 05 October 2010 at 11:05am
Yep, you whipped the old geezer in a 4-banger by 65/100ths of a second!
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 05 October 2010 at 5:37pm
Yes I did.
Damn, I'm livin' the dream.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: kharmata
Date Posted: 05 October 2010 at 7:12pm
Ok you guys - back to your corners
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 05 October 2010 at 9:30pm
I PLAY FOR KEEPS KEVIN. FOR KEEPS.
Nah, it's ok. Patty loves me just the same.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
Posted By: Patrick
Date Posted: 05 October 2010 at 11:07pm
Romeo wrote:
Nah, it's ok. Patty loves me just the same. |
As I've said before, Tristan is the little brother I never had.
And I just love scaring the bejesus out of him on the track with my 4-lung duke.
|
Posted By: Romeo
Date Posted: 06 October 2010 at 8:00am
Patrick wrote:
Romeo wrote:
Nah, it's ok. Patty loves me just the same. |
As I've said before, Tristan is the little brother I never had.
And I just love scaring the bejesus out of him on the track with my 4-lung duke.
| Scaring me... Pfft...
Back to topic for half a moment, more related to springs than shocks, but I forgot to mention what a drastic effect spring stiffness has. Doubling the spring rate (Alot, I know) allows one to drop the camber down to -0.5 front -0.8 rear. Huge difference, keeps the tires significantly flatter (More than twice as flat on the rear) during straight line.
------------- Never shift into reverse without a back-up plan.
|
|