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Ron Sutton 07-05-2013 01:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FETorino (Post 491192)
The wheels are Formula 43 RAD10 Clubsports. They no provision for centercaps and the I beam lightening on the spokes.

The fronts are 18x10.5 and the rears are 19x13s. I weighed them with my hanging hay

If that scale is accurate, that is a great light weight ... for that size of wheels.

Ron Sutton 07-05-2013 01:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Track Junky (Post 491193)
Thank you sir. Much obliged. You know gentlemen like me take a liking to that sort of thing. :guns::lol:

EDIT: Disclaimer: The message above was written after numerous cocktails last night and should be a testament that drinking and typing is not a safe practice.

That's funny right there. :lmao:

Ron Sutton 07-05-2013 03:34 PM

Hi Guys,

That could start a long topic of discussion in the tire and wheel section, or on this thread. Maybe someone like Ron Sutton will chime in with his thoughts.
Rob you’re right on this being a involved topic of discussion … but hey … what are we on here for besides seeing cool projects progress. I’ll chime in & add info to help in your decisions, but it’s your car & your decisions.

First I have limitations to tire size, self imposed limitations because I don't want to do any noticeable modifications to the body of my car.
This personal preference is what makes our cars different. Otherwise, if optimum performance was our only priority, we’ll all be building F1 cars.

Starting with that in mind and the black art of tires in general I evaluated the need for steam roller tires in the front. I am by no means an engineer or an expert on this. I have been playing with things that go fast around corners be it Cars, carts or motorcycles for 30+ years so I have some first hand experience and I've done a lot of research on this crap over the years.

First I believe JMO that wider is not the be all end all JMO. I have read and agree that there are benefits to width that go hand in hand with tire height and rim width that dictate the optimum contact patch for a combo. Weight on the tire,more importantly load which is affected by suspension design the cars weight and moment arm all play into it. then you get down to important factors like air pressure adjustment and heat buildup. Just slamming the largest tire you can stuff doesn't guarantee success.
Agreed. More to it than that.

But the amount of tire contact patch & the compound of that tire … is the #1 factor to grip … and therefore to speed. Everything we do in suspension tuning is to optimize the tires contact patch & load.

Other than singular purpose built Formula, Indy, GTP, Midgets & Sprint Cars … production type car’s typical limiting factor … is front end grip. In all my Stock Car & GT & Sedan Road Racing ventures, we know we can’t go any faster through the corners than the front end has grip. If we haven’t gone off the range with TW split or tire size split … it is relatively easy to balance the rear grip to the front. The front grip is top priority & typically where I have an edge over my competitors because I understand it well.


Think of it this way. The contact patch to contact patch is the true track width.
Dynamically, this is very true. Hopefully, you’re using the full tread width for contact patch with optimum front end geometry. I see a lot of cars with 8”,10”, even 12” of front tire tread … using only 40-60% of it in the corners because their geometry is out to lunch.

If I widen the tires by using more offset I narrow the track width. I also start messing with scrub radius as that patch moves to the inside of the line from the top balljoint through the bottom to the eventual point on the ground.
You are correct in what moving things affect, but “typically” those changes are positive changes. (Always exceptions). A typical scrub radius on PT cars with 275/285 tires falls in the 1.5-2” window. With zero being optimum, most cars can move the tire “in” with deeper offset wheels & improve the scrub radius. Your target doesn’t “have to be” zero … just know smaller scrub radius help the car to “cut” in the middle of corners where you’re running a late apex & makes a huge improvement in tight corners on road courses, back roads & AutoX.

On track width (center of tread to center of tread for any readers not familiar) … the optimum F/R TW split falls somewhere in the window of -1” to +1” depending on the cars weight distribution & suspension travel strategy. When a car has significantly more front weight distribution … say 53-56% … the front naturally wants to roll more than the rear. Having the front track width a little wider helps balance the car’s roll angle. I don’t like to have the front TW more than 1” wider than the rear, or the roll angle balance goes the other direction & the car wants to roll over on the outside rear tire too much.

With the much wider rear tires moving the rear TW "in" ... I suspect your rear track width is substantially narrower than your front & will contribute to things that cause a push condition. You should measure both front & rear track widths & post the info. If the rear is more than 1” narrower than the front … and if you care about this … then you would want to narrow the FTW, or widen the RTW or a balance of both. I later learned Rob's Torino body is wider in the rear, so he has a 2" wider TW in the rear than the front. 58" rear & 56" front, which we discuss how that will free the car up later in the thread.

In case this is new to anyone, Wider front TW than rear = tightens the car … too much makes it push. Wider rear TW than front = frees the car … too much makes it loose. If the car has more rear weight, I may, or may not, run the rear wider than the front. It does depend on if the suspension travel strategy is “high roll/low pitch” or “low roll/high pitch”.

If you’re not clear on this … a handling car HAS TO travel the suspension to work. You can not run it flat “low roll & low pitch” as it will push … and you can not run soft everything because “high roll & high pitch” will be loose. The old school strategy with stiff front springs & small-med sway bars is “high roll/low pitch.” The new-ish strategy (last 20 years) is soft front springs & large to OMG sway bars is “low roll/high pitch”.

I use TW split as a design tool to help balance un-balanced cars … and … as a track day tuning tool to balance the car’s roll angle. Ultimately, you need to have optimum grip on all tires and disengage the inside rear tire (to a degree) to turn well … then re-engage the inside rear tire (to a higher degree) for maximum forward bite on exit. So, on entry & mid-corner, the car needs to roll less in the front to keep both front tires engaged for optimum front end grip, while allowing the car to roll slightly more in the rear to disengage the inside rear tire, to a small degree, to turn better. For optimal exit, the car will have more roll in the front & less in the rear to re-engage the inside rear tire to a higher degree than it was on entry & exit, for maximum forward bite (traction) on exit.

I'm not racing in the Rolex series so no use over-thinking it but I didn't want to go far out on a limb in any one direction.
With the big difference in tire size, you are going out on a limb in one direction. But it’s your car, and I’m a fan of it making you happy. I know I’m building my car for me & my priorities.

So I took in some ways a conservative approach and right or wrong a big part started with aesthetics.
It’s your baby. :D

I didn't want a 1" or 1.5" outer lip on my front wheel. To me that give a Jiffy POP look of the center popping out of the hoop. JMO I don't like it.
Again, it’s your baby. :D

I also didn't want to be stretching or flaring the front fenders.
I believe this comes down to each person’s priorities. Another guy I’m helping is putting on fenders allowing him to add 1.25” of tread on the outside, to go along with the added 1.25” of tread on the inside.

My post was so long ... SURPRISE ... It had to be split into two posts. Part 2 is in the next post.

Ron Sutton 07-05-2013 03:53 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Part 2 of previous Post / Related, but new topic:

(This is still Rob in SoCal talking)
This also go me thinking about rim width. Why does one guy run a 275 on a 9" wheel and the Nissan guys run one on an 11"?

From all my reading, to a point,not always, wider is better for rim width if it is within the tire manufacturers recommendations. Look at Porsche they regularly spec tires on Wider than recommended wheel widths from the factory. My goal was the flattest tread profile for whatever tire size I choose. In reading every .5" of added rim with will add .2" of measured tread width on the same size tire. I looked to match the wheel width and tread with dimension for my chosen tire heights.

Some tire & wheel basics: Whatever tire width you put on whatever rim width … there is a “happy window” of tire pressure to achieve a full & even tire contact patch on the pavement. Every tire sidewall acts like a spring and the spring rate is affected by tire pressure. More pressure = higher spring rate. All tires do weird things when you get them out of their optimum spring rate. Until just recently I had & utilized an Intercomp tire sidewall spring rater to test sidewall spring rates of different tire & rim combinations to find their “happy window” & to know at what point they got weird.

When you have the tread width wider than the rim width, you have to run lower tire pressure to achieve a full & even tire contact patch on the pavement ... otherwise you’re “crowning” the tire & using less than the full tread width. This lower tire pressure makes the tire sidewall spring rate “softer.” The softer sidewall COMBINED with the fat tire sidewall bulge, leads to the tire “moving around” on the rim substantially. This is ugly when the car is pushed hard, like in track days or AutoX, but provides a softer ride.

When you have the tread width narrower than the rim width, you have to run higher tire pressure to achieve a full & even tire contact patch on the pavement ... otherwise the tire tread goes “concave” … not utilizing the center tread … ending up with less dyanamic tread width. This additional tire pressure makes the tire sidewall spring rate “stiffer.” The stiffer sidewall COMBINED with little to no tire sidewall bulge, makes the tire substantially “more stable” on the rim. This combination performs best … BY FAR … when the car is pushed hard, like in track days or AutoX, but provides a harsh ride.


I wanted a 26" tall front and 27" tall rear tire to fill my wheel wells and maximize the length of the contact patch and the tires ability to radiate heat. Out back that was a no brainer. 345 30 19 on a 13" wide wheel. This is the Dodge Viper spec. Michelin built that tire originally for the Dodge Viper. Am I smarter than those companies engineers? No.
Not to be a smart ass … ok … being a little bit of a smart ass … is your car a Dodge Viper … with the same suspension set-up & geometry? No. :poke:
In my opinion, I always suggest when you’re copying something, be clear on why.


So what to match it with up front. Well a front engine rear wheel drive 3400lbs Viper uses a 275/345 combo with a 50/50 weight distribution. I may not get to 50/50 but I'm trying to get as close as possible.
That will be awesome. The closer you get the weight balanced front to rear … and side to side … WITHOUT placing weigh out past either axle to get it … will be beneficial. Get as close as you can.

I'm also hoping to come in around that weight. Before anyone else says it I know there are more factors than that. To start with CG to Roll center creates a moment arm which actually influences load on the tire as much as total weight. Like I said before I'm not building a Rolex competitive racer so I'll keep it simple.
Sounds smart. Working with track width, tire & rim width are simple, predicatable tools.

I borrowed a 275 35 18 mounted on a wheel from Ron, thanks again Ron and a 295 35 18 tire from Brett, thanks bud. the 275 was an easy fit and the 295 ,using my wheel fit tool, was a little big. A 285 should be just right I thought.

Here is where Travis really came through. I had communicated with him a few months ago about a quote for my wheels. I really like the fact his wheels were clean timeless designs and engineered for and used in racing. From my wheelfit measurements I was pretty certain I had a BS measurement and wanted a 10.5" wide wheel wheel.

The 10.5" wheel did two things. The measured tread width of a 285 Mich on a 10" wheel was 10.2" So adding .2" for a .5" increase in wheel width this gave me 10.4" tread width on a 10.5" wheel width. A good match in my mind. It also gave me a 2" outside lip with my backspace measurement to avoid Jiffypop.
I really need to expand my terminology. I’m behind. Does “Jiffypop” mean the wheel center is crowned out … or flush with the outer edge of the wheel … or both?

In speaking with Travis he said he could build a test wheel to the same specs I thought I needed actually try it on the car. Hell yea. A week alter I had a borrowed wheel made from both new , blem and used parts. Travis sealed it so I could mount and air up my tire.

This was a huge help. I was able to confirm my thinking on backspace, the profile of the 285 on the 10.5 matching that of the rear tire, double checking caliper clearance and getting a real world visual can't be topped.

Tires are disposable items. My car won't be painted before I actually start tuning the set up. I plan on running it in shake down form for a while before I really finish it pretty. If I decide to go wider and do more tweaking on the body it won't be big deal. The 10.5" lets me use a 295 or 305 and still get a good footprint if in the end I feel the 285 is a limiting factor.

My suggestion would be … if anything I wrote influences you to go to wider front tires … do it now. Do it once & do it right, by getting wheels that are a little wider than the tread width. But if you’re happy with the 285’s … party on Garth.

I still think the 285 on the 10.5" wheel will give me all the front bite I need if my shocks, springs and bars are tuned correctly.
This will be your limiting factor in performance driving. If you really dial in the front suspension … use enough caster to end up with a KPI/Caster split favoring the caster by 1.0+ degrees, moderate camber gain, -1.0 camber, correct toe-out/Ackerman balance, zero bump steer & the optimum roll center … plus the optimum sway bar, spring & shock combo … the car can go no faster in the corner than the 285’s can grip. So you will be reducing the grip of the rear end to match the 285’s. As far as the performance is concerned, you might as well run 285’s on the rear, because all the tuning you do, will be to reduce the grip of the tires to the level of 285’s.

Now I’m going to take a different position.
This isn’t a race car. It’s your car. It’s your car to drive & have fun in however you want it to be. That may include track days, competitions, spirited driving, etc. I think you should build it the way you want it, which is what I love about Hot Rodding in general & Pro Touring in particular. I get the look you’re going after … because I like it too.

For looks: I also prefer a small 1.5-2” lip on the front wheels & a deeper dish (lip) on the rear wheels.

For handling: I prefer to get the scrub radius down to zero or close to it, which requires the face of the wheel to be moved out close to flush, kind of like the SCCA GT1/Pro Trans Am cars are. For me, handling always ends up winning on the priority list.

I attached a photo of my "Street tires & wheels" from American Racing. I think they look ok. But they "Jiffypop" so I could achieve a zero scrub radius front suspension.

In the photo:
On the Left, are my flush face front wheels: 18x10" AR "Burnout" VN472 Wheel with 8" backspacing. Tires are Nitto NT555 285/35ZR18
On the Right are my deep dish rear wheels: 20x12 AR "Burnout" VN472 Wheel with 4" backspacing. Tires are M/T S/R 29X15.00R20 = 365/30/20

* For Autocross & Track Driving these tires & wheels come off & "front & rear matching size" tires & wheels go on.
BFG Rivals 335/18/30 on 18x13” CCW lightweight LM5 rims.


...

Ron Sutton 07-05-2013 03:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vegas69 (Post 491305)
I agree with the notion that slapping a tire on a wheel that is to small or on the smaller side of the range may be counter productive. I do however think the biggest tire on the front(Right width wheel) with a reasonable stagger is the best way to go. You notice the Vette/Viper have decreased their stagger and increased front width lately. These old muscle cars are nose heavy and they want to push. You'll find yourself continually looking for an increase in front grip while you own the car. You'll naturally have more lateral rear grip at your disposal which means you will be decreasing rear grip to get chassis balance. I'd say a smaller rear tire would net better side and forward bite due to a slightly more desirable spring rate/shock setting.

Don't get me wrong, I think you can get the car to handle nicely.

Couldn't agree more.

Ron Sutton 07-05-2013 04:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Track Junky (Post 491324)
Now the dilemma......I have chosen a big ass 345 to handle the rear load but what size up front. IMO smart money goes with the widest I can get that will compliment the rears and I dont believe 285's are going to do it. Reason being I used to run 275's all around and had my car neutral. When I mini-tubbed my car and installed 315's out back just for the cool factor the car began to push. I'm still working on getting my car neutral again.


This is what I see all the time. If you think about your previous car in contact patch comparisons with 315's with approximately 11.8" of tread on the rear ... and 275's with approximately 10.2" of tread on the front ... your rear tires had 15.6% more grip.

You had a balanced car ... and added 15.6% more grip to the rear. They only way to fix the handling balance ... without swapping tires ... is to adjust the suspension to reduce the rear grip by 15.6%.

That's a lot. I know firsthand, because I've done it ... and it takes BIG spring, sway bar & roll center changes to achieve.

Vegas69 07-05-2013 05:06 PM

Great stuff Ron. Thanks for the education.

Ron Sutton 07-05-2013 05:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vegas69 (Post 491538)
Great stuff Ron. Thanks for the education.

No worries. I enjoy sharing when the topic is in my wheelhouse. I also enjoy learning about stuff that is not in my background.

Do you AutoX your car on a regular basis in Vegas? If so ... where?

Ron Sutton 07-05-2013 07:32 PM

Hey Guys,

I'm on the Forum today for a few more hours ... then I'll be gone for a week.


I'm meeting up with my friend Neil Porter at Sears Point where he's running 2 formula cars in SCCA racing. Then I'm camping with my girls the rest of the week.


I'll be back online late Thursday (7/11) or Friday morning (7/18).

Matt@BOS 07-05-2013 08:25 PM

Hey Ron, another question for you...

You mentioned that in Gaetano's case he might as well have just thrown 275 tires on the back of the car instead of the 315s because he would need to remove the 15.x percent more grip that the 315s added in order to get the car balanced again.

My question is, if you're working with more tire in the back versus the front, can you tune the rear to have more grip in the straights and less under steady state cornering?

When you discussed the pros and cons of high roll/low pitch versus high roll/low pitch, I was curious if you could run one setup on the front and the other on the rear. I feel like there is a reason you haven't mentioned doing this, but if you have the time, it would be cool if you could explain what would happen from running low roll/high pitch in the front and high roll/low pitch in the back.

Thanks for all the time you've spent sharing knowledge with us amateur hour club guys

Matt

FETorino 07-05-2013 09:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vegas69 (Post 491538)
Great stuff Ron. Thanks for the education.


Yes I gotta agree with that.

Thanks Ron. This is a lot of good information that should lead to some further discussion.:thumbsup:

carbuff 07-05-2013 10:05 PM

Does this discussion mean that I'm gonna stop hearing about putting 335's on the back of my car?! :knokwood:

FETorino 07-05-2013 10:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by carbuff (Post 491579)
Does this discussion mean that I'm gonna stop hearing about putting 335's on the back of my car?! :knokwood:

No:lol: You chose smaller out of fear not out of engineering concerns. That doesn't count :lol:

Ron Sutton 07-05-2013 10:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Matt.A (Post 491567)
Hey Ron, another question for you...

You mentioned that in Gaetano's case he might as well have just thrown 275 tires on the back of the car instead of the 315s because he would need to remove the 15.x percent more grip that the 315s added in order to get the car balanced again.

My question is, if you're working with more tire in the back versus the front, can you tune the rear to have more grip in the straights and less under steady state cornering?

When you discussed the pros and cons of high roll/low pitch versus high roll/low pitch, I was curious if you could run one setup on the front and the other on the rear. I feel like there is a reason you haven't mentioned doing this, but if you have the time, it would be cool if you could explain what would happen from running low roll/high pitch in the front and high roll/low pitch in the back.

Thanks for all the time you've spent sharing knowledge with us amateur hour club guys

Matt

Hey Matt, I enjoy helping.

I'm outta here for a week, so I'll discuss that when I get back.

Everyone take care.

Flash68 07-06-2013 12:12 AM

Ron, thank you getting this thread out of the toilet and back into some really good discussion. :D I might need to "rent" you to come fix my disaster of a build thread....

As others have said, I enjoy and appreciate the wealth of info you're sharing. :thumbsup:

Wissing72 07-06-2013 07:50 AM

Wow Rob, I go away for a couple of weeks and the car has come together quite a lot! Looks good.
The tire/wheel info was way too much for this early in the morning but glad it is there to re-read. Thanks.

FETorino 07-06-2013 08:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Flash68 (Post 491588)
Ron, thank you getting this thread out of the toilet and back into some really good discussion. :D I might need to "rent" you to come fix my disaster of a build thread....

As others have said, I enjoy and appreciate the wealth of info you're sharing. :thumbsup:

Flash I think you've done more to accomplish that than anyone by staying off the thread recently.:lmao:

Quote:

Originally Posted by gmtech921 (Post 491616)
Wow Rob, I go away for a couple of weeks and the car has come together quite a lot! Looks good.
The tire/wheel info was way too much for this early in the morning but glad it is there to re-read. Thanks.

Thanks I'm making progress and have some more things in the works that I'll be posting on in a few weeks.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ron Sutton (Post 491523)
On track width (center of tread to center of tread for any readers not familiar) … the optimum F/R TW split falls somewhere in the window of -1” to +1” depending on the cars weight distribution & suspension travel strategy. When a car has significantly more front weight distribution … say 53-56% … the front naturally wants to roll more than the rear. Having the front track width a little wider helps balance the car’s roll angle. I don’t like to have the front TW more than 1” wider than the rear, on the roll angle balance goes the other direction & the car wants to roll over on the outside rear tire too much.

With the much wider rear tires moving the rear TW "in" ... I suspect your rear track width is substantially narrower than your front & will contribute to things that cause a push condition. You should measure both front & rear track widths & post the info. If the rear is more than 1” narrower than the front … and if you care about this … then you would want to narrow the FTW, or widen the RTW or a balance of both.

In case this is new to anyone, Wider front TW than rear = tightens the car … too much makes it push. Wider rear TW than front = frees the car … too much makes it loose. If the car has more rear weight, I may, or may not, run the rear wider than the front. It does depend on if the suspension travel strategy is “high roll/low pitch” or “low roll/high pitch”.

Ron flew the coop for a week so until he gets back I'm taking a break from the tire/handling discussion. I have some more info on track width and such to throw out there for discussion.:sieg:

I did take track width into consideration when choosing the tire wheel package. My front comes in at 55.25" and the rear at 58" Ron was surprised by this since it is intuitive to think tubbing in the rear would push the track width in significantly. I had to remind him what you all know. My car has a big but. :lmao: So more tire to the inside of the fender would have widened the gap in front to rear track. Currently I have 1.75" more TW in the rear which should help free the back end up some even with the 345s.

I don't think I ever see anyone post about it. What is the typical TW measurement on a first gen Camaro?

intocarss 07-06-2013 09:26 AM

HEY FT... Is it done yet???:peepwall: Am I drunk, what's with the pink elephant????

Maybe we all should stay out of BMF's thread so he can finish :popcorn2:

Thanks for the write up Mr Ron :thumbsup:

FETorino 07-06-2013 09:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by intocarss (Post 491637)
HEY FT... Is it done yet???:peepwall:

:snapout: You know better than to ask that question. :snapout:


Quote:

Originally Posted by intocarss (Post 491637)
Am I drunk, what's with the pink elephant????

I don't know what you are talking about.:lostmarbles:

Quote:

Originally Posted by intocarss (Post 491637)
Maybe we all should stay out of BMF's thread so he can finish :popcorn2:

Doesn't matter. He can multi task. He is quite capable of doing nothing on the car and posting simultaneously.:rolleyes:

Quote:

Originally Posted by intocarss (Post 491637)
Thanks for the write up Mr Ron :thumbsup:

Can't wait till he gets back and the fun continues.:topic:

:cheers:

Flash68 07-06-2013 02:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FETorino (Post 491622)
Flash I think you've done more to accomplish that than anyone by staying off the thread recently.:lmao:




That's giving me an awful lot of credit. :thankyou:

Quote:

Originally Posted by FETorino (Post 491622)





I don't think I ever see anyone post about it. What is the typical TW measurement on a first gen Camaro?

Good question ... I would guess pretty close to yours.

Quote:

Originally Posted by carbuff (Post 491579)
Does this discussion mean that I'm gonna stop hearing about putting 335's on the back of my car?! :knokwood:

Only if you put 315's on the front. :action-smiley-027:

tubbed69 07-06-2013 03:04 PM

wheels are very nice Rob

DaleTx 07-06-2013 05:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FETorino (Post 491622)

I did take track width into consideration when choosing the tire wheel package. My front comes in at 55.25" and the rear at 56" Ron was surprised by this since it is intuitive to think tubbing in the rear would push the track width in significantly.

I don't think I ever see anyone post about it. What is the typical TW measurement on a first gen Camaro?

Rob... I just checked the track width on my first gen Camaro and it measures 60-7/8" in the front, and 60-1/8' in the rear. The overall width of my tires are 10.35" in front and 10.91"in rear. I measured the track width from the center of the tread to center of tread.

This is great info here on wheel and tire sizing.

:lateral:

FETorino 07-06-2013 06:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tubbed69 (Post 491691)
wheels are very nice Rob

Thanks a bunch. I am really happy with them. :D

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaleTx (Post 491705)
Rob... I just checked the track width on my first gen Camaro and it measures 60-7/8" in the front, and 60-1/8' in the rear. The overall width of my tires are 10.35" in front and 10.91"in rear. I measured the track width from the center of the tread to center of tread.

This is great info here on wheel and tire sizing.

:lateral:

Dale that's interesting. So your outside to outside total tire width is about 71" front and rear?

DaleTx 07-06-2013 07:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FETorino (Post 491716)
Thanks a bunch. I am really happy with them. :D



Dale that's interesting. So your outside to outside total tire width is about 71" front and rear?

Yes, that's exactly right... I just went out and measured from outside of tire to outside of tire, front and rear and they both measured 71"


rear overall width

http://i1048.photobucket.com/albums/...psc16a4da6.jpg


front overall width

http://i1048.photobucket.com/albums/...psb99462fa.jpg

A little fuzzy... but at least I got the thumb out of the way :)

Flash68 07-07-2013 12:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FETorino (Post 491622)

My front comes in at 55.25" and the rear at 56"

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaleTx (Post 491705)
Rob... I just checked the track width on my first gen Camaro and it measures 60-7/8" in the front, and 60-1/8' in the rear.

Robster -- so what you're saying is.... not only does the Torino have a big BUTT.... it also is bowlegged?!

:ohsnap:

67goatman455 07-08-2013 09:59 PM

Whew! i never thought i would see so many informative posts in a row in this thread!

I have so many noob questions, that i'm pretty lost but ill sit back and keep reading. Hopefully ill catch on. looks like i need to change my mind set, I too planned on throwing the biggest freaking tire on the back i could, and make do with what i could up front. I will be quite disappointed on the track if i do that, i see!

SBDave 07-09-2013 01:11 PM

This discussion, those wheels, I like all of what's going on here!
...and I have nothing to contribute.
Carry on!

FETorino 07-09-2013 10:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gmtech921 (Post 491616)
Wow Rob, I go away for a couple of weeks and the car has come together quite a lot! Looks good.
The tire/wheel info was way too much for this early in the morning but glad it is there to re-read. Thanks.

Well don't stay away so long next time.

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaleTx (Post 491705)
Rob... I just checked the track width on my first gen Camaro and it measures 60-7/8" in the front, and 60-1/8' in the rear. The overall width of my tires are 10.35" in front and 10.91"in rear. I measured the track width from the center of the tread to center of tread.

This is great info here on wheel and tire sizing.

:lateral:

Dale I was looking back at some older notes of mine and saw my track widths were different than I posted. I recalculated them and it seems my old notes were right with a 58" rear track.

Quote:

Originally Posted by 67goatman455 (Post 492081)
Whew! i never thought i would see so many informative posts in a row in this thread!

Yea Dave has been staying away:lmao:

I have so many noob questions, that i'm pretty lost but ill sit back and keep reading. Hopefully ill catch on. looks like i need to change my mind set, I too planned on throwing the biggest freaking tire on the back i could, and make do with what i could up front. I will be quite disappointed on the track if i do that, i see!

Actually I'd say it's more like trying to plug the biggest tire I can on each end. It still makes me laugh calling a 285 a small tire.:rolleyes:

Quote:

Originally Posted by SBDave (Post 492168)
This discussion, those wheels, I like all of what's going on here!
...and I have nothing to contribute.
Carry on!

Quote:

Originally Posted by tubbed69 (Post 491691)
wheels are very nice Rob


I'm kinda partial to the wheels. Light, strong and the correct color.

http://i291.photobucket.com/albums/l...psa03f4d23.jpg

Cole 07-10-2013 06:56 AM

I think they are going to look right @ home.. Nice choice!

Flash68 07-10-2013 10:29 AM

That wheel is sick.... would make even a Torino look pretty good. :confused59:

:rockin:

intocarss 07-10-2013 07:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Flash68 (Post 492324)
That wheel is sick.... would make even a Torino look pretty good. :confused59:

:rockin:

:trophy-1302: :trophy-1302: :trophy-1302:

FETorino 07-10-2013 07:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Flash68 (Post 492324)
That wheel is sick.... would make even a Torino look pretty good. :confused59:

:rockin:

If you did something similar on BMF it wouldn't be a bad thing.:thumbsup:

intocarss 07-10-2013 11:36 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by FETorino (Post 492415)
If you did something similar on BMF it wouldn't be a bad thing.:thumbsup:

:hello:

Flash68 07-10-2013 11:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FETorino (Post 492415)
If you did something similar on BMF it wouldn't be a bad thing.:thumbsup:

Similar... but different. :wacko:

Quote:

Originally Posted by intocarss (Post 492455)
:hello:

Now there's the Jer we all know and love. :bigun2:

Ron Sutton 07-11-2013 06:11 PM

Hi Guys,

I'm back. I'll try to catch up.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Hi Todd, I love racing in Vegas.

Do you AutoX your car on a regular basis in Vegas? If so ... where?

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Track Junky 07-11-2013 06:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ron Sutton (Post 492581)
Hi Guys,

I'm back. I'll try to catch up.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Hi Todd, I love racing in Vegas.

Do you AutoX your car on a regular basis in Vegas? If so ... where?

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Glad to hear your back Ron. :thumbsup:

Ron Sutton 07-11-2013 06:38 PM

Hey Ron, another question for you...

You mentioned that in Gaetano's case he might as well have just thrown 275 tires on the back of the car instead of the 315s because he would need to remove the 15.x percent more grip that the 315s added in order to get the car balanced again.

My question is, if you're working with more tire in the back versus the front, can you tune the rear to have more grip in the straights and less under steady state cornering?

Good question. Tough answer.


First, What is this steady state cornering you speak of? I'm kidding, but only a little. The car is almost always in transition. Even in the "roll through zone" ... after the driver is off the brakes & has not picked up the throttle yet ... the car is decelerating (coast down) so the speed is changing ... "settling" in pitch (nose wanting to come up & rear down) ... and increasing in roll angle a small amount more. On long sweeping corners the car might be in the "same state" for a second. But on most road courses, short to medium ovals & AutoX, the car is constantly "transitioning."

When I'm working with a race driver, we break each corner down to three sections ... and if that is not enough detail, we'll break it down to all 5 or 6 driving actions. The three sections are Entry (braking & turn-in), Middle (roll through zone, coasting, no brake or throttle) & Exit (throttle roll on & steering unwind).

If the car is doing something difficult to sort out, the driver & I will break it down to what happens at each step: Brake application, steering input into the corner, steering set, brake release, roll/coast, a sharp steering "cut down" if there is one, steering unwind & throttle roll on.

You can make the larger rear tired car turn great on entry & have awesome grip on exit. The middle is always the challenge. The bigger rear tires make it hard to roll the center at optimum speed without pushing. And the ironic part is, the mid corner push caused by the larger rear tires ... CAUSES the car to "snap loose" on corner exit ... and be loose on exit.

If you can get a handling car to turn well in the middle, without pushing, it won't "snap loose" on exit ... and if tuned right ... will have more grip on exit, than if we were fighting a tight or push condition in the middle from larger rear tires.

Just so everyone is clear:
A. There are lots of suspension tuning methods to improve rear tire grip on corner exit. Having bigger rear tires is just one.

B. I'm not saying you can't run bigger rear tires and have a good handling car, but when they difference gets significant, you designed in handling problems for yourself.

C. There are situations where we want bigger tires in the rear, than the front, but it is when the car's weight balance is rear heavy.

D. Otherwise, having the same size tires front & rear, makes it easiest to create a well balanced handling car, that will be fastest on track.



Matt

Ron Sutton 07-11-2013 07:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Matt.A (Post 491567)
Hey Ron, another question for you...

When you discussed the pros and cons of high roll/low pitch versus high roll/low pitch, I was curious if you could run one setup on the front and the other on the rear. I feel like there is a reason you haven't mentioned doing this, but if you have the time, it would be cool if you could explain what would happen from running low roll/high pitch in the front and high roll/low pitch in the back.

Thanks for all the time you've spent sharing knowledge with us amateur hour club guys

Matt


Hey Matt,

It works .... but not the best.
But not for a lack of trying, as I have seen literally hundreds of racers "in transition" from old school set-ups to the new high travel set-ups try to keep their setups in the rear.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Conventional:
• Stiff front springs
• Small, soft sway bars
• More Roll
• Less Pitch

Sample Set-up for a 3000# car:

Front Springs: 550-700#
Front ARB: 100-200#
Rear Springs: 150-200#
Rear ARB: 50-100# or … No ARB & 50-100# stiffer rear springs … or higher rear Roll Center


----------------------------------------------------------------------------

High Travel:
• Soft front springs
• Big, stiff sway bar in front
• Known as SS/BB … soft spring/big bar … if no bump stop or coil bind is utilized.
• Same concept used in conjunction with travel stops: Bump Stops or Coil Bind
• Less Roll
• More Pitch

Sample Set-up for a 3000# car:
Front Springs: 300-400# (200-350# with bump rubbers or coil bind)
Front ARB: 600-1500+# (from short tracks to big tracks)
Rear Springs: 300-500#
Rear ARB: 100-200# … or No ARB & 100-200# stiffer rear springs … or higher rear Roll Center


----------------------------------------------------------------------------

The problem if you allow the rear to roll too much is ... the car rolls over unevenly .... onto the outside rear tire ... and off the inside front tire ... reducing the tire contact patch on the ground in the front by half ... causing the car to push.

One key to the "less roll" set-up ... is less roll ... running flatter ... in the rear helps keeps the inside front tire planted.

Make sense?

Ron Sutton 07-11-2013 07:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FETorino (Post 491622)
Ron flew the coop for a week so until he gets back I'm taking a break from the tire/handling discussion. I have some more info on track width and such to throw out there for discussion.:sieg:

I did take track width into consideration when choosing the tire wheel package. My front comes in at 55.25" and the rear at 58" Ron was surprised by this since it is intuitive to think tubbing in the rear would push the track width in significantly. I had to remind him what you all know. My car has a big butt. :lmao: So more tire to the inside of the fender would have widened the gap in front to rear track. Currently I have 1.75" more TW in the rear which should help free the back end up some even with the 345s.

Rob,

I did incorrectly assume your wider tires in the rear would have narrowed the rear TW. Thanks for clarifying your car is different. You're on the right track that the wider rear TW will free/loosen up the car..

If your measurements are right ... front TW 55.25" & rear at 58" ... the math ... 1.75" more TW in the rear ... doesn't jive. That would be 2.75" more TW in the rear.

Would you please confirm the numbers, so we're talking on the same page ?

Thanks !

Ron Sutton 07-11-2013 07:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 67goatman455 (Post 492081)
Whew! i never thought i would see so many informative posts in a row in this thread!

I have so many noob questions, that i'm pretty lost but ill sit back and keep reading. Hopefully ill catch on. looks like i need to change my mind set, I too planned on throwing the biggest freaking tire on the back i could, and make do with what i could up front. I will be quite disappointed on the track if i do that, i see!

Yes, Scott, you would be constantly fighting a push condition. And that's no fun.


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