Too much Oversteer
Moderators: timk, Stu, zombie, Andrew, -alex, miata
Too much Oversteer
Have had my 1994, 1.8l NA for a coule of month now and really enjoying the experience. It is fitted with 14x6 alloys with no name tyres with heaps of tread and I think a standard suspension setup. Car has a tendency to oversteer giving me a spin first time in the wet. At time I was not pushing it and also consider myself a reasonable driver. What tyre pressures do old hands recommend and if this does not resolve the problem what suspension mods are recommended. I am only interested in a comfortable good handling car for road use.
Thanks
Lindsay
Thanks
Lindsay
- AJ
- Speed Racer
- Posts: 4349
- Joined: Sun Oct 30, 2005 8:27 pm
- Vehicle: NC
- Location: Gold Coast
Too much Oversteer
chuck the tyres & get some good quality ones, that'll solve your problem
oh, & get a good wheel alignment when you do
oh, & get a good wheel alignment when you do
Don't worry about what people think, they don't do it very often
XMX5 Rogues
-
- Fast Driver
- Posts: 155
- Joined: Tue May 22, 2007 11:51 pm
- Vehicle: NA6
- Location: Sutho Shire, Sydney
Too much Oversteer
As said above, a wheel alignment should solve all your problems. Just make sure there is more nagative camber at the rear wheels than at the front - Typically the front should be approx negative 1 degree and the rear should be negative 1.5 degrees - for "sporty" driving styles. These numbers were from another thread on here that I can't find at this second... At any rate, a reasonable wheel alignment should greatly help.
This should make the car fairly neutral when using equal tyre pressures.
This should make the car fairly neutral when using equal tyre pressures.
Red '89 Eunos Roadster, BD Rollover Bar, 1.8 engine conversion - Confucius say: Man beneath car with spanner is not necessarily mechanic!
- Hellmun
- Racing Driver
- Posts: 979
- Joined: Sat Feb 10, 2007 1:15 pm
- Vehicle: NB8B - Turbo
- Location: Wollongong,NSW
Too much Oversteer
Lots of things can cause oversteer..... You need to identify what you have first before you change things. Measure the width of the sway bars with some verniers. Does it have a LSD? What brand tyres? Are you sure you were smooth with the throttle and steering? If you can't identify the shocks I'm sure you could take a picture and show people here.
Too much Oversteer
Wow you guys don't muck around. Thanks for the very prompt replies. I have thought of most of them just not sure how much extra I want to invest (and explain to wife). I have considered new tyres but if I go that route would you recommend going up to 15x6.5 and if so what type of tyres. And yes I was driving smoothly when it spun as I am an old fart and got that out of my system 30 years ago.
Lindsay
Lindsay
-
- Fast Driver
- Posts: 155
- Joined: Tue May 22, 2007 11:51 pm
- Vehicle: NA6
- Location: Sutho Shire, Sydney
Too much Oversteer
No worries!
As for upsizing your wheels and tyres - I have put 15" wheels on my NA, with 195 wide tyres and the lower tyre profile does make the ride a little harsher, but the slightly wider tyres do improve cornering. It's a bit of a trade off.
Also, you can get wheel and tyre packages from Bob Janes, with 15" wheels, for little more than the cost of a set of good tyres. Also, I can honestly say the "Bob Jane" Xenon tyres are quite good, both in the wet and in the dry - having taken a set on track days, and club runs - but not quite as sticky as some more expensive tyres.
Just don't get an alignment done by Bob Janes... go to a proper suspension specialist!
Hope this helps!
As for upsizing your wheels and tyres - I have put 15" wheels on my NA, with 195 wide tyres and the lower tyre profile does make the ride a little harsher, but the slightly wider tyres do improve cornering. It's a bit of a trade off.
Also, you can get wheel and tyre packages from Bob Janes, with 15" wheels, for little more than the cost of a set of good tyres. Also, I can honestly say the "Bob Jane" Xenon tyres are quite good, both in the wet and in the dry - having taken a set on track days, and club runs - but not quite as sticky as some more expensive tyres.
Just don't get an alignment done by Bob Janes... go to a proper suspension specialist!
Hope this helps!
Red '89 Eunos Roadster, BD Rollover Bar, 1.8 engine conversion - Confucius say: Man beneath car with spanner is not necessarily mechanic!
- lightyear
- Infinity & Beyond
- Posts: 2331
- Joined: Mon Jun 02, 2008 7:54 pm
- Vehicle: NA6 - Turbo
- Location: s.e. melbourne
Too much Oversteer
Just change to some decent new tyres. When i bought mine i was power sliding around any corner that i felt like giving it some on. The tyres where old, but had plenty of tread. Just gone hard.
Now i don't try doing slides anymore as it sticks really well with the 205/15's.
Now i don't try doing slides anymore as it sticks really well with the 205/15's.
NA8B - P.I 1:50.1 Wntn1:38.0 Sand1:27.6 Wntn S1:08 Bfrd1:06.9 Cldr1:08.5 Wak1:10.4
"SE" - P.I 1:43.8 Wntn1:32.9 Sand1:22.0 Bfrd1:05.3
"SE" - P.I 1:43.8 Wntn1:32.9 Sand1:22.0 Bfrd1:05.3
- Matty
- Racing Driver
- Posts: 1652
- Joined: Wed Apr 23, 2003 11:00 am
- Vehicle: NB8A
- Location: Melbourne
- Contact:
Too much Oversteer
lightyear wrote:Just change to some decent new tyres. When i bought mine i was power sliding around any corner that i felt like giving it some on. The tyres where old, but had plenty of tread. Just gone hard.
QFT.
-
- Racing Driver
- Posts: 1418
- Joined: Wed Jan 25, 2006 11:39 pm
- Vehicle: NA8 - Turbo
- Location: Adelaide, Australia
- Contact:
Too much Oversteer
I'd play with tyre pressures first, on 32psi my car is frigging great, but 34psi sees it getting sideways quite a lot when pressing on.
- Steampunk
- Speed Racer
- Posts: 4670
- Joined: Wed Oct 10, 2007 9:16 am
- Vehicle: NA6
- Location: Southside of Breeze-bane
Too much Oversteer
As a side note, don't forget, there is a difference between "handling" and "grip".
MX-5's are a great handling car, but that doesn't mean that you can hook it into a 90degree corner at 80km/h and expect it to grip all the way.
My friend's Lancer GSR doesn't handle as well, but it grips like all hell.
Perhaps it's just a simple matter of lack of experience and asking/expecting too much of your car's capabilities.
MX-5's are a great handling car, but that doesn't mean that you can hook it into a 90degree corner at 80km/h and expect it to grip all the way.
My friend's Lancer GSR doesn't handle as well, but it grips like all hell.
Perhaps it's just a simple matter of lack of experience and asking/expecting too much of your car's capabilities.
-
- Fast Driver
- Posts: 155
- Joined: Tue May 22, 2007 11:51 pm
- Vehicle: NA6
- Location: Sutho Shire, Sydney
Too much Oversteer
Adam_NAclubman wrote:I'd play with tyre pressures first, on 32psi my car is frigging great, but 34psi sees it getting sideways quite a lot when pressing on.
As a side topic, it may be useful to have a database of "Favourite tyre pressures" for wheel and tyre combinations. I personally run mine (89NA stock suspension on 15" 195s) at around 39psi and find that gives the best feedback of tyre grip around corners, and I also get fairly even tyre wear - although it's bumpy and rattly over poor roads.
Red '89 Eunos Roadster, BD Rollover Bar, 1.8 engine conversion - Confucius say: Man beneath car with spanner is not necessarily mechanic!
- Matty
- Racing Driver
- Posts: 1652
- Joined: Wed Apr 23, 2003 11:00 am
- Vehicle: NB8A
- Location: Melbourne
- Contact:
Too much Oversteer
1red5 wrote:As a side note, don't forget, there is a difference between "handling" and "grip".
MX-5's are a great handling car, but that doesn't mean that you can hook it into a 90degree corner at 80km/h and expect it to grip all the way.
My friend's Lancer GSR doesn't handle as well, but it grips like all hell.
Perhaps it's just a simple matter of lack of experience and asking/expecting too much of your car's capabilities.
in my experience, it's almost certainly the tyres. Once they go hard, the car will wheelspin and oversteer at any opportunity
- Garry
- Speed Racer
- Posts: 3481
- Joined: Sun Apr 27, 2003 11:00 am
- Vehicle: NB SP
- Location: God's Country
- Contact:
Too much Oversteer
Another vote for tyres AND a GOOD wheel alignment. It also depends what your coming from too. If you have been driving a FWD car for a long time then jump into a car as well balanced as the MX5 it's pretty easy to get the tail out because you dont have the terminal understeer you've been used to.
Shiney black one with added red bits. Member of the fart club. Now with extra doof and Sunlong. - deceased and gone to heaven
Too much Oversteer
Hi I run 15 x7 with 205's on my NA8,I recently had the wheels painted so I used my old 14x6 mags for a while. I found it to be a much nicer car,smoother and more direct,with the 14's. I weighed both, the 14's 13.1 kilo's 15's 16.7 kilo's a big difference in unsprung weight. So IMO buy some good 14 inch tyres and spend your money elswere on your 5
-
- Racing Driver
- Posts: 1418
- Joined: Wed Jan 25, 2006 11:39 pm
- Vehicle: NA8 - Turbo
- Location: Adelaide, Australia
- Contact:
Too much Oversteer
I wouldnt even bother with good tyres, rubbish tyres have less grip but are usually more progressive as the grip runs out.
The others are right about the difference between handling and grip though, theres a very big difference
The others are right about the difference between handling and grip though, theres a very big difference
Return to “MX5 Wheels, Suspension, Brakes & Tyres”
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 186 guests