drobbie
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- 2
Do you use tie down shocks? They will take some time to return to static height. It is tough to reproduce this in the garage.
Ranger Mike said:6t5, having owned a 67 corvette and now flogging this rear engine formula car with independent rear suspension..go with the 3 link. Get the front end right. Go with good solid rear 3 link set up..my opinion
Caster = 7*Ranger Mike said:without some numbers i can't tell. I can tell you that you should not be afraid to start welding once you think you are close. Things can be changed later..nothing is permanent. I would say you need to know as a minimum the caster, camber, camber build, roll and dive over 3 inches, ackermann, bump steer if you can. what is king pin inclination? any idea of your scrub radius..the basics.
What would you recommend using for final KPI to do the initial design? A lot of the Cobra guys use 7* caster, I was using that for a starting point. What would you recommend?Ranger Mike said:7 degrees is a lot of caster...KPI is big too in my opinion but if it works on mustang... copy it...i like at least 2 degree ackermann but understand I am old school before a lot of computer modeling came in..can you adjust it to crank in another degree?
Ranger Mike said:welcome Supertruck
Loose off is usually stagger ,how much stagger are you running?
tire temps? is right rear reading good at all three points? inside middle outside temps?
what is the car weight, left side weight, rear weight , cross weight?
where is the 3rd link mounted? See post # 253 page 13 and post # 707 on page 36.
what is spring in the top link pull rod? do you have shock with top link?
Are the trail arms solid or do you use Rt Rear pull rod?
do you run front ARB (swaybar)? how big is it # wise?
any idea where the rear roll center is?
Is rear end square to the center line ? Are you running roll steer?
Ranger Mike said:supertruckView attachment 86821
One thing that sticks out is the top link mounting location. Top link should be mounted at center of weight mass of the car. In your case you have 56.1% left side weight. Your rear track width is 63.75” so 63.75 x 56.1% = 35.76” location from right tire centerline. You had it placed at the center or 31.87” from right tire centerline. No wonder the car was having problems rolling on the throttle.
Think of your old chain saw you laid on the shop floor. The Chain saw is 36 inch long so the center line is 18”. Now take that old green broom handle you use to beat the neighbors dog with and place it at the 18” mark. (see photo). Try pushing the chain saw forward. Now move it to the left and place it closer to the center of Mass and push it. Things move a little more equal..right?
In the case of the top link you are pulling on it and not pushing but you get the idea. This is why we have to use available force , mechanically to our best advantage so now you know why the top link mount is so important.
How much travel is the top link spring compression? Should be 1/2 inch which is ideal?
I would add a top link damper ( shock absorber) mounted 5 degrees up hill. This will assist tuning. Range on mounting up hill is 0 to 7 degrees. Mare angle tightens chassis on corner entry less loosens on entry. Never mount it with down hill angle.
I have it all the way to the left against to bracket on the left side so I can't quite get it to 56%. I moved the front mount to the left the same amount so it won't be pulling in a angle. I assume this is the proper way? Pull bar spring is preloaded a 1/4" and it's traveling close to a 1/2"Ranger Mike said:supertruckView attachment 86821
One thing that sticks out is the top link mounting location. Top link should be mounted at center of weight mass of the car. In your case you have 56.1% left side weight. Your rear track width is 63.75” so 63.75 x 56.1% = 35.76” location from right tire centerline. You had it placed at the center or 31.87” from right tire centerline. No wonder the car was having problems rolling on the throttle.
Think of your old chain saw you laid on the shop floor. The Chain saw is 36 inch long so the center line is 18”. Now take that old green broom handle you use to beat the neighbors dog with and place it at the 18” mark. (see photo). Try pushing the chain saw forward. Now move it to the left and place it closer to the center of Mass and push it. Things move a little more equal..right?
In the case of the top link you are pulling on it and not pushing but you get the idea. This is why we have to use available force , mechanically to our best advantage so now you know why the top link mount is so important.
How much travel is the top link spring compression? Should be 1/2 inch which is ideal?
I would add a top link damper ( shock absorber) mounted 5 degrees up hill. This will assist tuning. Range on mounting up hill is 0 to 7 degrees. Mare angle tightens chassis on corner entry less loosens on entry. Never mount it with down hill angle.
Ranger Mike said:you have the top link mounted for 53% left side mass. I never was satisfied until it was right but racers are weird like that. the shock is to keep wheel hop away when braking. A 600# compression and 65# rebound is typical for the 3rd link damper. Before you change rt ft camber check your toe - out as the readings are typical for wrong toe out condition.
here are the AVERAGES of the tires
lf ft 145
rt ft 143
lr 151
rr 159
cross weight lft rear to rt ft 147 this Avg should not exceed ft avg or rt side avg.
idea i 6 to 10 degrees less than ft and right side averages
note rt rear average temp is 16 deg hotter than rt ft avg
you are oversteer or loose
avg rr should be 10 to 15 deg cooler than rt ft.
get the rt ft temp fixed and shoot for rt ft tire being hottest temp avg
try to get 5 to 7 degree spread from inside middle and outside
lft ft should be next hottest with 3 to 5 degree spread
the rears should be real close to each other and look for 10 to 15 degree cooler on rt rear to rt ft
i got no doubt you will get a checker soon
Ranger Mike said:can not enlarge them..so can't comment on um?