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Maybe it's the Elephant.:lmao: |
Front End Geometry
Rob,
I tell most everyone, "we can go no faster through the corner than the front end has grip" ... and since we have 285's on the front of a big car ... we need to optimize them to their fullest potential, within the limitations you have put on the car yourself: no fender mods, 2" of front wheel lip, etc. Here are the keys: 1. Your KPI/Caster Split should favor the caster by 0.5 to 0.75 degrees. Your C6 spindles have 9.15 degrees of KPI. Which would mean you want 9.65 to 10 degrees of static caster. That "seems like" a lot of caster, but just what the doctor ordered. GM runs this spindle at 7.7-8.3 degrees of caster in the stock Z51 & all the fast Corvette track guys run 10.0-10.5 degrees of caster. 2. You will want the A-arms installed to achieve "anti-dive." That means the LCA angles down in front & the UCA angles up in front. This will compliment the suspension set-up I'm going to recommend. And it will provide you with dynamic "caster gain" as the suspension compresses. You need about 0.5 degrees of caster gain. If you end up with more ... which would be good ... you need to reduce your static caster by the amount above 0.5 degrees. 3. How much camber gain you can end up with will also affect your roll center. Since your priorities are road course track days, Silver State high speed runs & Optima type "all around" performance events, you'll want a slightly higher front RC than you would for AutoX. I'd say 4" at ride height & 1.25"-1.5" in dive. That is easy to get by increasing the UCA angle (taller spindle or ball joint) ... which will also increase camber gain. 4. If you end up with 2.0 degrees of camber gain, I'd suggest a "starting point" of .75 degrees of static camber, for a total of 2.75 degrees of camber in dive (suspension compressed). If you end up with less camber gain ... add more static camber ... and keep the 2.75 degrees total. Other tuners may tell you need way more camber, but they're not used to working with a KPI/Caster Split favoring the caster. 5. Run .060" total toe-out. Yes ... out. Then play with the Ackerman & bump steer ... so you end up with .140"-.150" toe out ... in dive ... with the wheels turned 20 degrees. 6. You need to transfer a high amount of weight off the rear tires & onto the front tires for optimum cornering. 7. You need to achieve & maintain a low roll angle to optimize the front tire contact patches. 8. Therefore the optimum suspension set-up for your ride would be a high travel front end ... to achieve high pitch change & low roll angle ... also known as soft spring big bar. I'll hop back on here tomorrow & outline the suspension set-up to achieve this ... along with tuning tools to balance the car at the track. |
I corrected post #1212 after getting a PM from Rob with his spindle info.
I did not correct earlier posts to reflect his correct track width difference of 2" wider in the rear, but we'll use that number from here on out. |
Hey Rob,
I've calculated the wheel spring rate we need, but to tell you what spring rates to get, I'll need "True Spring Motion Ratios" that include spring angle from your chassis builder ... so get front & rear ... and post them. We may be able to work with your existing rear sway bar, if the effective rate is high enough. Typically AME's have 3 positions. Get the effective rate in all 3 positions & post. Might as well get & post the effective rates for the front sway bar too, but I doubt it will be high enough for the SS/BB set-up I'm going to recommend. |
Rob,
What I have outlined below is a soft spring/big bar … high travel, low roll suspension setup that you & I discussed … to optimize the handling of your long wheelbase car with tires 21% larger in the rear. It is just a baseline to start from ... and it assumes a lot of things for us to discuss & get clear on. Most of these assumptions can be tuned around, if my assumption is wrong. Some can not. Assumptions: 3500# car 116" Wheelbase 51.5% front weight 19” CG height 2.5”-3” front shock travel in dive Front track width 56” & rear 58” / 2” wider in rear 285 front tires & 345 rear tires / Same compound front & rear Readers … do not run with this set-up for your car. That would be like taking someone else’s medicine when you have no idea what health issues they have. I can not say this strongly enough. This is not a universal set-up or even a universal concept. I have outlined this for Rob’s long wheelbase Torino with tires 21% larger in the rear & a 2” wider rear track width. Baseline Starting Point to Tune From: Springs & ARB's: Front Wheel Rate: 275# Front Spring Motion Ratio: _________? Front Spring Rate: _________? Front ARB Effective Rate: 1050# Rear Wheel Rate: 350# Rear Spring Motion Ratio: _________? Rear Spring Rate: _________? Rear ARB Effective Rate: 400# ARB (Anti Roll Bar) Arms: Front: Short, strong (4130 chromoly) Rear: Steel, no aluminum Front Roll Center: 4" at ride height & 1.25"-1.5" in dive Rear Roll Center: 11” with level Panhard Bar at ride height 4-link Specs: Lower Bars: 0.0 degrees / Level at ride height Upper Bars: 9-10 degrees down in front Instant Center: Same height as lower bars … 50-60” ahead of rear axle CL Pinion angle: 2-3 degrees negative from the driveshaft* Front Shocks: I’m not willing to share my proprietary valving info on a Forum. In general, you will need moderate compression valving in the front, to slow the rate of compression on braking & corner entry & substantial rebound valving to hold the front end down through the corner. Rear Shocks: Again, I’m not willing to share my proprietary valving info on a Forum. In general, you will need moderate compression valving in the rear, to slow the rate of compression on & corner entry & moderate rebound valving to keep the rear tires planted on corner exit. Adjustable Shocks: Triple adjustable shocks ... low-speed rebound, hi-speed rebound & hi-speed compression ... are a key to dialing in a bad ass race car on track day ... and dialing it back to a drivable Pro Touring car at the end of the day. There are poor shocks, good shocks & great shocks available. I choose not to talk brands on a forum. Wheel width: Your 285’s need to be on wheels 1” wider than the tread width & put the rear tires on wheels with the same width at the tread width. You want the front tires “stable” and you want the rear tires to “move around” a little. Tire pressures: Optimized for full contact patch & even temps. Rob, as with all cars that get pushed to their limits ... when you find the limits, you WILL NEED TO TUNE on this set-up. I’ve got you close … except for shock valving … which we’ll need to discuss. In my next post, I’ll outline some tuning strategies after you run it on a road course. And if you want, we can discuss some changes for better AutoX performance. |
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I went down to Speedway Engineering today to grab the proper drive plates, inner seals and dust caps.:D I continue to be impressed with the Machine work done by Travis and crew at Formula 43. The drive hubs in the last pic are being held in place by the perfect interference fit of the hub to the wheel center. Hub centric magic at its best:thankyou: Travis. http://i291.photobucket.com/albums/l...ps50c59a40.jpghttp://i291.photobucket.com/albums/l...ps64433c71.jpghttp://i291.photobucket.com/albums/l...ps3e54d430.jpg :cheers: |
Real technical advice, clear pictures of high $$$ race parts...... WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON IN HERE?? :warning: :snapout: :wrongforum: :badidea: :bang:
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Man Rob your thread is just dripping with tech now, this is great!! It kinda drowns out all the BS :lol: although I'm sure once you slow down on the tech and progress it will be full steam ahead!!
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Fun little road trip yesterday. Rob and I stopped at Speedway and we're like two kids in a candy store. Their finished parts warehouse was just so cool. Snouts, drive plates, dust covers, housings, crowned axles you name it.
I couldn't help but pick up and admire at least one of everything and you can see above the quality of finished products. And the people there are just great too. I think Rob bought an extra drive plate to be made into a hip hop/car guy necklace :lol: Dust cover and fit looks killer Rob. :cheers: |
Wow, you are sure not cutting corners anywhere! I don't know how you sleep much at night, as all of this all comes together.
What is your projected completion date? |
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