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Old 03-06-2009, 01:47 PM
BBShark BBShark is offline
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Default Determine Ride Height on a Frame Up Build?

I would like to know how you determine the finished ride height before the car is finished for a car with a one of a kind suspension? I know that you have some flexibility with coilovers but I'm not sure how you account for tire "squish" when all of the weight (of the finished car) is on the tires. I thought this dimension might be negligible but I measured my daily driver and came up with 1 1/2 inches of difference on a 28 inch diameter tire (distance from ground to center of wheel = 12 1/2 inches). That is significant.

So, is there a fixed number you use or do the tire manufacturers give you this info or................?
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Old 03-06-2009, 08:59 PM
JRouche JRouche is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BBShark View Post
I would like to know how you determine the finished ride height before the car is finished for a car with a one of a kind suspension? I know that you have some flexibility with coilovers but I'm not sure how you account for tire "squish" when all of the weight (of the finished car) is on the tires. I thought this dimension might be negligible but I measured my daily driver and came up with 1 1/2 inches of difference on a 28 inch diameter tire (distance from ground to center of wheel = 12 1/2 inches). That is significant.

So, is there a fixed number you use or do the tire manufacturers give you this info or................?
You have some good questions. Tire size will vary from manufacture, so the shouldnt be too much of an issue. I have GY F-1s and they dont compress much (I could measure) when loaded. A 28" dia tire sounds like it has a tall sidewall. 26" is pretty much the standard, give or take a lil, for preformance tires. No matter the wheel size. But if you have a 20" rim with a 26" tire its gonna deflect less than a 15" rim with a 26" tire. So with that you should know what size wheel you are gonna be thinking about. But tires are gonna be pretty close.

Now... Overall ride height with all the suspention parts is more difficult to figure. You have pinion angles to think about, trailing arm angles, A arm angles, total vehicle weight as finished, shock or coil over mounting placements, additional linkage arm placements, say like a pan hard bar or watts link, all affected by ride height.

My car is a one of a kind as far as suspension and determining ride height. I had to put it all down on paper first. And if you really want to do it right you make a scale drawing and "line" the entirety of it all up. You can get roll centers, front and rear, roll axis, center of gravity with some scales, roll couple, anti squat, and a whole lot of good figures. It starts on paper before you even make the first weld. Ooops, I kinda went off the road huh from your question LOL But yeah, the tires are an easy step. The rest is just fun. JR
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Old 03-22-2009, 06:58 AM
BBShark BBShark is offline
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OK, maybe I'll rephrase the question.

I see a lot of people on here and other forums laying out suspension geometry. I have always seen this done as though the tire has no "squish". This makes the assumption that the centerline of the spindle is centered on the tire.

In my example above, that would be completely wrong. The centerline would actually be 1 1/2 inches lower at ride height! That's significant, big time.

So, can someone tell me if this number is published by the tire manufactures or if it is ignored by builders or if anyone has any information about this or?
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Old 03-22-2009, 08:25 AM
LateNight72 LateNight72 is offline
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It really depends on the tire, pressures, etc. For instance, I will be running 30 series tires on the front suspension I am building (the one with a thread a couple down), and 35 series on the back, whenever I get around to designing an IRS.

The tire "squish" is negligible in a 30/5 series that's properly inflated.
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Old 03-22-2009, 01:52 PM
BBShark BBShark is offline
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Originally Posted by LateNight72 View Post
It really depends on the tire, pressures, etc. For instance, I will be running 30 series tires on the front suspension I am building (the one with a thread a couple down), and 35 series on the back, whenever I get around to designing an IRS.

The tire "squish" is negligible in a 30/5 series that's properly inflated.
Even if it's a 1/2 inch, it's not "negligable". Take a look at what it does to your IC calculation in your thread. Seems like if you are doing these layouts for geometry, you want to start with the most accurate information.

So, do the tire manufacturers give you this info or................?
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Old 03-22-2009, 07:21 PM
LateNight72 LateNight72 is offline
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To add to your question,

I redimensioned, taking 1" away from the bottom half of the tires. Mind you 1" of "squish" is very generous for track tires.

Anyhow, the only thing it changed was my rollcenter. It increased my rollcenter by a total of 0.054"

So yes, my notion of it being negligible is sufficient.
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