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#1 | |||||
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Snowwhitepillowformybigfathead
Posts: 3,437
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#2 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 2000
Location: Raleigh, NC, USA
Posts: 636
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I like it. Some things I dont fully understand, but will have to when choosing the best "General" setup for my car next mth. I cant be too specific as I race on many different tracks & the alignment & tire pressures will have to change at each track.
How much experience do you have on track, Scott?? I want to know what has worked for you & what really hasnt through testing at the track. Im really interested to read about how something you changed drastically changed the way your car handles on the track. Im pretty sure you pyro your tires for an even better setup at the track. Pete |
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#3 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2000
Posts: 12,048
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Thanks for another insightful and well thought out write up of the dynamics of the handling situations encountered by tracking front drive cars such as ours.
Can't believe I read the whole thing in one sitting, either. Good luck with the "jonses". Ed
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#4 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Only those who dare to lose, win.
Posts: 1,507
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One day I hope to be able to understand 50% of what you wrote. Anyone know enough to help defend or refute this disseration?
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Casey President & CEO Irksome Behavior, LLC Family owned and operated since 1990 http://images.honda-tech.com/set1/smile/emwink.gif |
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#5 |
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Member
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what is "pneumatic trail effect"
thanks, t.. |
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#6 |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Snowwhitepillowformybigfathead
Posts: 3,437
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Pete,
I've had my ITR since 98 and put about 9000 actual on track miles at Portland, Pacific Raceways and Buttonwillow. I've driven the car thru four basic development phases: stock, Mugen Lowdown/DOT, Mugen N1 (Soft)/DOT, Mugen N1 (Stiff)/DOT/188whp. I've gone faster each step of the way as both my driving and the cars potential improved. 2002 was my first year of SCCA Regional racing. I ran in RS and won every RS race I entered against competetion that wasn't generally close. I also ran a couple of races in ITE and got my ass handed to me by high horsepower cars. My best race lap at Portland with the chicane (the CART support race) was faster than Sapp's SVWC TC winning fast lap the previous year, while my qualifying time would've put me 5th on the grid. This is of course an apples to oranges comparison since I was on Hoosiers and they on Toyo T1S's, but then I was down alot of horsepower and Portland is regarded by some as a paved dyno. They're just numbers, but they suggest that I don't suck. My previous race experience was 6 years of Motocross. I raced CMC and AMA Pro from 79 to 81, and was a decent local pro. That career ended in injury at Saddleback, and I never recovered. I kept racing for two years, and got faster and faster, but I kept reinjuring my knee. I quit one day on a local hilltop practice track, on the ground, in massive pain, crying and pounding the ground ala Mika Hakkinen - I couldn't go on. During that career I learned about racing brutality. I did my share of brake checking, diving under a guy and taking him out, the subtle art of squaring it off in front of somebody and block passing them (I was proud of the front tire rubber on my swingarm and side number plates). I can tell you that I have to work at remembering that I'm in a different world when I'm in the car. What has worked for me is taking Scott Zellners advice. King Motorsports is a fantastic resource and the price for what you get is exceedingly fair. Go back thru my old posts and you'll find most of what I've done and gone thru. None of the changes I've ever made to the car took me backwards - I always go faster on the next setup (but then I expect to). I've only done a little bit of tire temp testing since I am my own crew. There's alot to think about with tire temps and it takes alot of time and money to really isolate things. Maybe I'll have more to say about it next year - I've found some infrared packages that might bring real time tire temp capture within my budget. Scott, who says "you know what caster is right? And so you know what trail is right? So imagine zero caster, and then note that the tire still wants to go straight (though not as much as if there was some caster and trail). A tire typically has a bit of pnuematic trail - a difference between the vertical projection of its center of rotation and the resultant of it's drag)"...something like that.... |
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#7 | |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Snowwhitepillowformybigfathead
Posts: 3,437
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I figure that this belongs most appropriately here. Some of the local technical racers in my area have started getting together once per month for a dinner / tech meeting. This is the response that I sent to the participants following the first meeting the other night.
Quote:
Strut cars like the new RSX offer additional challenges. Below ground roll centers, if they are even possible, might be associated with decreased negative camber gain, and that might be much more important than minor amounts of jacking force. My friends Golf with pushrod front end and dummy strut has 20 degrees of kingpin to get a decent camber curve - and maybe 9 degrees of caster. Formula cars - modern Fords in particular appear to run below ground roll centers; F1 cars are harder to figure out - it's possible they might have high wheel instant centers outside the track and roll centers well below ground and let static negative camber do it all. Scott, who when he gets some time will have to play games with Mitchell to see if that makes any sense.... [Modified by RR98ITR, 1:05 PM 3/6/2003] |
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#8 |
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: MA
Posts: 3,160
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i'm drooling over the prospect of your analysis of roll centers. any way to tell how roll center relation to cg affects rate of lateral weight transfer? or is it too difficult to calculate/a useless value in respect to tuning??
nate [Modified by solo-x, 2:09 AM 3/7/2003]
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For Sale MSD Blaster Coil $45 |
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#9 | |
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: MA
Posts: 3,160
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Quote:
nate
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For Sale MSD Blaster Coil $45 |
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#10 |
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New User
Join Date: Jan 2000
Location: Plotting My Revenge
Posts: 7,722
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"They're just numbers, but they suggest that I don't suck."
Well, maybe not in this context. Fear the Frog!!! Wheeeeeeeee!!!! |
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#11 |
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Banned
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I think something that isn't mentioned frequently is, since FWD means so much work at done at the front end, to really make the car go fast, ultimately you have to setup the car to be very aggressively. In the past Racecar Engineering has done several pieces interviewing BTCC drivers and discuss some of the car setup principles. The drivers is a very important part of the performance equation. And his driving style can dictate the setup changes a lot. You can have two drivers with different driving style and different setup achieving nearly identicle lap times.
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#12 | |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: 90210, CA, usa
Posts: 2,719
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Quote:
This helped me.
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Projects: P2J ED9, PR4 DA9, GSXR |
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#13 |
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Member
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<TABLE WIDTH="90%" CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=0 ALIGN=CENTER><TR><TD>Quote »</TD></TR><TR><TD CLASS="quote">(the square root of 0.7 squared plus 0.7 squared being equal to 1).</TD></TR></TABLE>
So you're saying that the square root of .49 (which is .7) plus .49 is equal to 1? Because it doesn't. Or are you saying that .7 squared plus .7 squared equals 1? Because it does. Did you word your math wrong and that's why I'm having a hard time following along? btw: BACK FROM THE DEAD! Great post so far... I'm half way done reading and 1/4 way done comprehending. |
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#14 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
a^2 + b^2 = c^2 (the square root of 0.7 squared plus 0.7 squared being equal to 1). Scott was getting at (a^2 + b^2) ^ 0.5 = c with c = 1 or the radius of your friction circle, and a = b, then a = b = 0.5^0.5 or .71 something.
__________________
Chris Fries - #117 H1 Prelude - now with more VTEC (Thanks King!) 2007 and 2008 Midwest Honda Challenge H1 Champion Go to Estrada Customs in Libertyville, IL! Great place for any body work! |
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#15 |
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Member
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ahhh.. so I wasn't reading it wrong.
I understand the theorem |
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#16 |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Orange, CALIFORNIA, USA
Posts: 1,282
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Scott, I think you have waaaay to much time on your hands man!
Kiwi
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#17 |
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Member
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Wow, there went my entire lunch break.
Weight transfer, huh? I've made it a habit of correcting myself (and others) by using "load transfer" instead. I know its a nitpicky thing, but am I correct? |
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#18 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
If you define "weight" as the force the earth applies to an object... then most of your "downforce" on an ITA/HC car is from purely weight, when driving on a flat surface. That's not all of it, since you may be cresting a hill, or using a banked turn, or have some significant aero downforce. Since you're really moving the tire loading, and that tire loading isn't a pure function of weight... well... I guess "load transfer" is more accurate. I'm still going to say "weight transfer", since it's pretty obvious we're not talking about mass transfer. -Chris, not Scott.
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Chris Fries - #117 H1 Prelude - now with more VTEC (Thanks King!) 2007 and 2008 Midwest Honda Challenge H1 Champion Go to Estrada Customs in Libertyville, IL! Great place for any body work! |
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