I have to agree about the design. Why? Why? Why? I can only figure that an
upright with an axle that would not fall off and proper control arms top and
bottom would have been too many pieces and alignment to put together for a
production car while you just throw that big casting on and it's done. They had
engineers that were smart enough to gather up the right parts and design a good
setup, so cost and production line problems in my opinion are the guilty
figures.
---- Bill Babcock <Billb@bnj.com> wrote:
=============
I'm sure it does. I bet it needs to be locked down so it doesn't move at all. I
took one look at the IRS of the TR4 and TR6 and thought "no thanks". Hard to
see why they designed it that way. I would point out that I DID say "unless you
can't get the suspension to work". I don't have any idea how that monkey motion
stock suspension could be made to work.
I think the biggest advantage of soft springing is compliance of the car to the
track surface--you want the wheels to do their own thing but keep as big a
contact patch as possible in the corners and over the rough stuff, and probably
be on the edges of the tires down the straights. When I ran a lot of roll/bumps
in simulation software for Peyote I found a stiff spring for a given wheel load
overcomes the shock damping so the wheel winds up bouncing on rebound. If you
increase the damping it moves the bounce to compression and the shock pumps
down. With an ideal suspension setup the best spring weight is what is required
to hold the fully loaded car off the ground at the required ride height with
the suspension more or less centered in it's travel. At least that's the case
in software.
In the real world, I increased the stiffness of the springing in my Radical to
accommodate my fat ass because I was grinding the splitter away and bottoming
the rear suspension in some bumps. Lost about four seconds around PIR. FOUR
fricking seconds, went from 1:22:yada with the chicane to 1:26:sumpthin. Played
with tire pressures, shock tuning, roll bars and got about two seconds back,
sort of. sometimes. You know how that goes. Put everything back to stock and
got my four seconds back. Went to a lower downforce splitter and dialed most of
the wing off, ground off half of the wing wickerbill, and it stopped bottoming
and I got another two-three seconds. Wahoo. Went from thirds and fourths to
firsts and seconds.
Of course guys like Garmey can run you down in a Corvette with suspension from
a Conestoga wagon and pass you with his wheels bouncing up and down like
superballs. But he's F&$%ing nuts.
On Mar 22, 2010, at 4:07 PM, Kas Kastner wrote:
> Well, it might be true for a lot of cars, but the IRS Triumph needs some umph
>in the rear end. Anything around 600 pounds is a disaster and SLOW. I am
>talking about the stock suspension not the SCCA version. Like beer, try it
>you'll like it.
> ---- Bill Babcock <Billb@bnj.com> wrote:
>
> =============
> I don't think much of stiff springs either unless you can't get the
> suspension to work
>
> Sent from my iPhone
--
Never be beaten by equipment
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