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Motorsports and Skilled Driving Discussion for Organized Racing and motorsports and tips and techniques at becoming a better driver. |
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10-03-2003, 06:54 PM | #1 |
Leaky Injector
Join Date: Sep 2003
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Suspension Questions/Help: Spring Rates, Tein HEs, Grip and Drift
Hello everyone, I am just trying to figure some stuff out on Suspension (ultimately deciding on what I will buy). From what I have read (searched) here, people generally seem to say the high the spring rate the better the car will handle (this also makes the ride less comfortable), (S13/14 the front usually being 1-2 KGs higher than the rear), and this makes some sense. This allows the tires to put more pressure onto the ground, increasing lateral Gs... Am I correct in saying that? Is there more to it?
Then there are a few things I am curious about: If this is correct then what I want to know is why did a Project Car like Sport Compact Car's S13, with JICs FLT-A2s (8 KG front, 6 KG rear) drop them down to 6 KG front and 5 KG rear, and then was able to achieve 1 G on the skid pad? They said it was too stiff (Vol. 15, No.10/Oct. '03)... I am really interested in the Tein HEs, but I want to know if they are really "drift" specific Coilovers and why? I want a car that I can drift with, but ultimately (I think) I really just want to be able to go fast in a not straight line (Togue, roadracing/autox,). Would a setup with HEs (8kg F/6kg R) inhibit ultimate grip? I hope this makes sense, and these questions have not been answered before/beaten to death. Thanks so much, I have learned so much from the forums already (I have found it to be one of the best ones out there) wish I would have found it a while ago. Thanks -- talk to you soon, mmtmatrix |
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10-03-2003, 10:18 PM | #2 |
Zilvia Member
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Too stiff will allow a car to lose grip more quickly making it harder to drive. A car that can roll a bit seems to settle onto the tire and really grip hard...sorry I don't know enough technical stuff to explain it. A downside is that the more the car rolls the longer it takes to change direction.
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10-03-2003, 10:49 PM | #3 |
WOW addicted
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proper spring rate is dependent on the conditions that you require ultimate grip. If your driving on a fairly bumpy surface, like the boys at scc were doing on that skid pad, then softer springs will allow the tire to remain in contact with the pavement better. Instead of the stiff spring jolting the car upwards initially in response to a big bump and momentum carrying the tire with it off the ground, the softer springs will absord it, and allow the tire to roll over to imperfection and remain in contact with the pavement. Of course softer springs dilute transient response left and right, and will increase body roll. So, we improve body roll, and transient response with anti-roll bars. If they were on a smoother skid pad, they would have pulled higher lateral g's with the higer rates.
8K/6K isn't really that high. It is definately livable on everyday roads, if you don't mind a bit of back, and kidney pain after a few hours of driving. Lower rates in the 4-6K range are better for street use cars, as it will make the car more stable on crappy roads (scc's skid pad) If you track your car, you will thank yourself for having the higer rates like on the HE's or FLT-A2's, as race tracks are often very smooth. I would think "Drift spec" is marketing hype... cliffs note: Soft springs = suspension compliance, and more grip on rough/ uneven pavement, more forgiving Stiff springs = Fast transient response, less body roll, more precise tool when used on smooth pavement.
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10-04-2003, 03:59 PM | #4 |
Zilvia FREAK!
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Additions to what sykikchimp has already said:
A softer spring rate will be better for you if you do mostly street driving and some mountain road stuff. Uneven pavement + stiff springs/high damper = unpredictable traction! Just like the guys at SCC and sykik say, the bumps will toss your car up and bring the tires contact patch with it. What that is like on the road is your car skipping along the road. Dangerous, and scary. On the other hand, on a smooth surface, you will LOVE that suspension. I live with the Tein HEs on the street everyday and do fine. Its not uncomfortable. I even drive up to my home town in Oakland from San Diego a couple times a year ( 8+ hours ) and the ride is fine. On back roads, you have to know the surface conditions. There can not be any surprises. |
10-04-2003, 06:07 PM | #5 |
Zilvia Member
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One more addition would be wet traction is reduced with a stiffer setup. I guess it makes the slight loss of traction over a bump a much bigger deal when its wet.
I enjoy a soft suspension for the street, driving to work every day is dangerous enough as it is, especially in the wet with bumps, construction, pot holes, etc...I honestly wouldn't want to go harder than what eibach has to offer with its line of springs. Best way would be to drop 2k into a decent 2nd car and just track that. But if you can't/won't do that, you'll have to make a comprimise somewhere between track performance and street compfort/safty. |
10-07-2003, 11:18 AM | #6 |
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Additional motivations for higher spring rates:
1) Allowing the car to be lowered further (CG and aero) while reducing the chances of bottoming either the suspension or the body work. 2) Reducing the affects of toe change (bump steer) and camber change through reducing the total suspension travel. -- Joel |
10-13-2003, 03:22 PM | #7 |
Leaky Injector
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Thanks for all the help, I really appreciate it. I'm still learning and curious/confused about a few things.
I kinda understand suspension stuff, and looking at a set of Tein HE for me S13 coupe. I want a set up that is still somewhat streetable, but good quality that allows me to drift, but not so geared towards drift that it totally oversteers and I have not ability to road race (grip drive) and togue. But, in talking to representatives at Tein, they say that not only are the HEs somewhat aggressive for street driving, but that they are meant for drifting, and the "spring rates and valving" are specifically R&D for drift driving. I am wondering if this is entirely true, and if I will have a hard time grip driving, and comfortably going fast on corners with the HEs? Thanks for all the help, mmtmatrix |
10-13-2003, 03:29 PM | #8 | |
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COULD be true. thisis how tanabe's drift spec is engineered.
the FLTA2 and HE are very different valving wise. i have done both on my car. its really DRIVER PREFERENCE (so dont ask me which is better drifting/grip wise--i have my own preference to my car setup) ernie fixmer (rotora driver and usa d1 driver) posted this abuot the tanabe DD drift spec coilover on freshalloy.com Quote:
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