The American wrote:This must be close to sitting on the bump stop?
Great shot! I’ve saved this one
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The American wrote:This must be close to sitting on the bump stop?
You will enjoy these pads!The American wrote:The Winmax W3 brake pads in the front have been swapped out for W6.5s (broader and higher heat range, and higher torque capacity), the brakes have been bled, the engine oil changed and filter inspected and replaced. Ready for Noosa!
The American wrote:The oil cooler has seen better days...
You will enjoy these pads![/quote]Magpie wrote:
greenMachine wrote:The American wrote:The oil cooler has seen better days...
Curious what you did/planning to do for the oil cooler?
I am about to start on a radiator mounted cooler for mine, having decided that the guard doesn't have enough room for a track-oriented turbo-sized cooler ...
PS - I reckon you should send a photo of that to Setrab with a letter of thanks for building them strong!
The American wrote:I changed a few things after the Oakey event.
The other thing I changed was the front and rear spring rates. ... I decided to swap in the 10kg front springs I had and move the front 6kg springs to the back and then align to suit. The consequence of this: The car gained about 20mm at the front with the spring perches at their lowest point, and what had been 4 degrees of static camber became 3. I’m not happy with the new height or the resulting alignment numbers and so another change is coming.
These changes have prompted the beginning of a new learning curve with suspension.
Firstly, after swapping in the much stiffer 10kg front springs, at the Noosa Hillclimb the suspension felt SOFTER! If the car slid, it let go slowly, when turning in or braking hard it seemed to take longer than normal to take a ‘set’ or didn’t feel like it took a set at all. How could this be? The symptoms are what I would expect from a softer set up, but the spring rates are much higher.
The only idea I have so far is that I’ve been relying heavily on the bump stops under the soft springs, and I’ve become accustomed to laying the car on to them in hard corners and brake applications. I chatted with Josh at (**Spoiler alert**) MCA suspension, and he suggested that with R-compound tyres and 6kg front springs, I was probably spending a lot of time on the bump stops.
I don’t know what the effective spring rate of the bump stops is, but my guess is it will be a steep rising rate when reached, and probably much higher than the new springs. The new springs and slightly higher ride height have kept the car off the bump stops, resulting in a ‘softer’ effective rate.
I can’t think of another reason why the higher spring rates would feel so much softer. Ideas?
greenMachine wrote:First, what are the 10kg springs length - sounds like yours are too long. If you are running helpers, try taking the helpers out. Otherwise you need new springs, maybe same rate but just shorter. My suggestion would be to calculate how much shorter (under load) they need to be with the perch where it is, add in however much you want to raise the perch, then add in however much the (say) 500kg they are carrying at 250/side has compressed them - that should allow you to calculate the free length. Don't forget to adjust for the motion ratio, and make sure you will have enough compression in them to avoid binding under bump. Or just ask MCA? You might want to check out the rears too, I don't know if a front spring will always fit a rear shock. Fix the springs, fix the alignment, and see how it handles then.
What do your bump stops look like - if they look shagged they probably are, and that might mean they have been heavily used. They aren't meant to be part of the 'normal' suspension, and they will add dramatically to your spring rate, so I wouldn't be too surprised at what you describe. You shouldn't be so high you never use them, but you shouldn't be riding them either when cornering on a smooth track. If you want to check what is happening down there, use a cable tie on the shaft to show how far it is travelling under bump.
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