#1
Posted 01-23-2013 08:32 PM
I have been running 4 7/16th all around, but am considering 1/8" rake in front (4 5/1 6" each side) with 4 7/16" rear on both sides. Our turns are fast, and turn-in is very important at our track. As I said, the track is FLAT all the way around.
Can you tell me what works for you on such a track: either 1.8 miles or 2.9 miles?
By the way, cross weight is 50.6%. We have more right turns than left, and the most important turns are rights. It is CW ONLY. Thank you. Flyntgr
#2
Posted 01-23-2013 08:58 PM
When I do a set up for a track, in my mind that set up is a starting point for the weekend, if I am lucky, I will hit it right on. I am just not that lucky.
Frank
TnT Racing
SCCA Ohio Valley Region
#3
Posted 01-23-2013 09:24 PM
Danny
Danny Steyn Racing | DSR YouTube Channel
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#4
Posted 01-23-2013 09:31 PM
I have been running 4 7/16th all around, but am considering 1/8" rake in front (4 5/1 6" each side) with 4 7/16" rear on both sides. Our turns are fast, and turn-in is very important at our track. As I said, the track is FLAT all the way around.
We call that the Texas Chopper look
Never been anywhere that I felt that was advantageous, more often than not people incorrectly try to add rake in the car to cover up for another handling issue they don't realize they have. You need not move too much higher or lower in rear, more than 1/4 difference, you probably starting to get off into an area you would probably would be better off not going IMO.
East Street Auto Parts
Jim@Eaststreet.com
800 700 9080
#5
Posted 01-23-2013 09:55 PM
Flyntgr, its all a matter of personal preference. I prefer to de-rake my '99 for most tracks, seems to suit me better.
Danny, does that mean "no rake" or "negative rake"?
--because someone commented that we should all post our names, and not be anonymous. I agree.
#6
Posted 01-23-2013 11:32 PM
#7
Posted 01-24-2013 05:47 AM
Do you make adjustments at the track?
There are two camps out there, those who adjust on the car and those that don't.
Frank
TnT Racing
SCCA Ohio Valley Region
#8
Posted 01-24-2013 06:03 AM
Danny, does that mean "no rake" or "negative rake"?
Negative rake - higher in the front than in the rear - I give up a bit on corner entry in order to get to WOT sooner
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Danny
Danny Steyn Racing | DSR YouTube Channel
Danny Steyn Photography | Adept Studios | Ocean Machinery | OPM Autosports | Rossini Racing Engines | G-Loc Brakes |
2 x SCCA Runoffs Champ | 1 x NASA National Champ | 6 x June Sprints Champ | 10 x ARRC Champ
1 x SCCA Super Sweep | 2 x Triple Crown | 4 x Hoosier Super Tour Points Champ | 6 x Majors Points Champ | 5 x SEDiv Driver of the Year
#9
Posted 01-24-2013 07:35 AM
But headed to the track I want to have the absolute best guessed setup entering the track so I can concentrate on driving more than wrench turning.
#10
Posted 01-24-2013 09:27 AM
I sent you an email.. Too much to say on forums. All those 1.6 guys might learn something
East Street Auto Parts
Jim@Eaststreet.com
800 700 9080
#11
Posted 01-24-2013 10:23 AM
Take your best shot in the shop. Run a session, raise the car, see if you like it. Then lower the car, see what you think.
The car driven 100% with a wildman mentality will want something totally different than a 90% driver with a smooth style.
Dave
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Dave Wheeler
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Building Championship winning cars since 1995
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#12
Posted 02-03-2013 10:39 AM
Chris
Happiness is a dry martini and a good woman ... or a bad woman.
- George Burns
#13
Posted 02-03-2013 10:57 AM
#14
Posted 02-03-2013 12:21 PM
All the rules of thumb and Carroll Smith comments on rake, "ride height", and roll center are either irrelevant, misleading, or plain wrong for an SM. Unlike every "real" racecar in the world, an SM is simultaneously oversprung, underdamped, and most important - starved for "shock travel".
Forget rake (and the meaningless pinch weld measurements that don't take into account chassis twist vs. the subframes or whether you are running 0/32" Toyos, much taller 4/32" Hoosiers or 8/32" rains) and start paying attention to your individual shock travels.
If you hit the bumpstop sooner or harder, at that moment that wheel end is much "stiffer" until you get back off the bumpstop. During those moments, the car will act like any other car would if you stiffened that corner (or that end).
I can't stress enough how much this effect DOMINATES the SM's chassis behavior - more than alignment, more than shocks, more than swaybars, more than anything but tires and % cross, I'd say.
Try +2 turns in the back, and then try -2 turns in the back. If you want extra credit, have some slotted urethane discs in various thicknesses made that your pit guy can slide onto the shock shaft to change shock travel quickly without altering anything else. It isn't illegal to use them for practice and test days and you'll learn more in one test session than anything the Internet commentariat could ever tell you. (I didn't invent this great idea, I just copied it ... ).
I've found myself telling a lot of people this over the phone: "It is better to run way too high or way too low than it is to hit the bumpstop at the worst time in every corner". With many SMs being camber starved, this ends up translating into "It is better to run too low ....".
Good luck and have fun
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#15
Posted 02-03-2013 03:48 PM
My $0.04:
All the rules of thumb and Carroll Smith comments on rake, "ride height", and roll center are either irrelevant, misleading, or plain wrong for an SM. Unlike every "real" racecar in the world, an SM is simultaneously oversprung, underdamped, and most important - starved for "shock travel".
Forget rake (and the meaningless pinch weld measurements that don't take into account chassis twist vs. the subframes or whether you are running 0/32" Toyos, much taller 4/32" Hoosiers or 8/32" rains) and start paying attention to your individual shock travels.
If you hit the bumpstop sooner or harder, at that moment that wheel end is much "stiffer" until you get back off the bumpstop. During those moments, the car will act like any other car would if you stiffened that corner (or that end).
I can't stress enough how much this effect DOMINATES the SM's chassis behavior - more than alignment, more than shocks, more than swaybars, more than anything but tires and % cross, I'd say.
Try +2 turns in the back, and then try -2 turns in the back. If you want extra credit, have some slotted urethane discs in various thicknesses made that your pit guy can slide onto the shock shaft to change shock travel quickly without altering anything else. It isn't illegal to use them for practice and test days and you'll learn more in one test session than anything the Internet commentariat could ever tell you. (I didn't invent this great idea, I just copied it ... ).
I've found myself telling a lot of people this over the phone: "It is better to run way too high or way too low than it is to hit the bumpstop at the worst time in every corner". With many SMs being camber starved, this ends up translating into "It is better to run too low ....".
Good luck and have fun
That's exceptional advice. I have tried the -2 turns (in the rear) and spun the car on the outlap. I also took a Fatcat bumpstop to a guy who measured the spring rate as it was compressed. You get a nominal (but still meaningful) rate during the first 1/8" - 1/4" or so of compression, As you compress it further than that the spring rate goes through the roof. The term "bump STOP" is very appropriate for this part.
#16
Posted 02-03-2013 04:35 PM
If you set up your car to low and you get into the bump stops, you better have fast hands.
Frank
TnT Racing
SCCA Ohio Valley Region
#17
Posted 02-03-2013 06:23 PM
--because someone commented that we should all post our names, and not be anonymous. I agree.
#18
Posted 02-03-2013 08:00 PM
Frank
TnT Racing
SCCA Ohio Valley Region
#19
Posted 02-03-2013 10:10 PM
The handling characteristics of the car will change and be unpredictable if you regularly get into them. Did you ever get into a corner and your car get wicked loose?
Yeah, I can think of an occasion that surprised me. Maybe that was what happened.
I'm probably not being clear with my question though...why are bumpstops so important (in any racecar) if you should rarely be at full shock compression? I just assumed SMs relied on them frequently because of the limited shock travel.
--because someone commented that we should all post our names, and not be anonymous. I agree.
#20
Posted 02-03-2013 10:57 PM
Hitting the bump stops is like switching from the rate of your springs to a much stiffer spring. If you gradually compress your shocks to the point where you're on them and the track is smooth, you may not notice you're on the bump stops. If you're on a bumpy track with sudden elevation changes and your car is set too low, you will definitely realize why you don't want to go to low.
I learned what Saul recommended by accident. I'd heard it before but I hadn't done it. I left my car setup where I liked it for a smooth flat track and drove on a bumpy rough track. Within 2 laps my eyes were dinner plate size, it felt like my butt was being hit with a bat, and my hand speed was tested to the limit. I jacked it up about 2 turns (1 didn't seem nearly enough as bad as things were) and lo and behold I had suspension again. Point being a little bit of driving on the bump stops isn't necessarily bad. Slamming into them everywhere is not something you want in my humble opinion.
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