172 Race Car
powdercoated rear beam, hes a long way offHe's nearly there.
powdercoated rear beam, hes a long way offHe's nearly there.
Still waiting for james to 'see the light'
I think it's great you're giving it a go.
I'd love to have the time to do similar development work but I just want reliability for the moment. I'd be gutted going out and having major issues each time.
If it all works out I'll be sure to copy you lol
Any idea what races you're planning for next year yet?
Best 2 circuits weve raced on imo. Really great for club racing, really disapointingWith the calendar, we're quite disappointed Mallory and Silverstone have been replaced with Cadwell and Pembrey because Silverstone is about 30 mins from where the car is kept and Mallory is about 30 mins from Ryan's place, so those ones were quite convenient for us.
Have you been in it? I cant rememberFair play to you for trying something different! BUT i'm a big believer in why fix what isn't broken, there are a lot easier ways of curing the problem you were having without having to go into modifying the subframe etc, as many have said just look at the burpspeed car, it has only very basic suspension mods and it handles like no clio i'v ever seen! sometimes simple is better
ears burning?Firstly lol at all the cheeky buggers talking about me :butt:
Sorry to hear about the test guys! Hope you get sorted whichever way you go. I can see both points of view and it is something that I don't think will ever be agreed on. The best way I find is do what you want to do, if people aren't going to agree with you and that bothers you then don't tell them you've done it
I really do think you're over-thinking the solution to a very simple problem.
If I was building a tin top clio and had understeer I think I'd just look to the other tin top cars that don't and try what they've done rather than thinking up overly complicated solutions to possible problems that result in more issues
If everyone did this in life then where would we be? Still living in caves or using horses for transport? But I do understand what your point is.
I like that they have tried something different and ultimately this solution is very good once it is working. Popping a drive shaft is not unexpected and I imagine they guys weren't surprised but maybe a little disappointed. This is a great idea, it maybe a little over kill for this level of racing, but when they get it sorted I wouldn't be surprised to see more people doing it.
If everything else is maximised (I'm not the person to say it is or isn't in this case) mate then the mods they are making will make it better without a doubt i'm afraid! I do agree though that I wouldn't do it at the cost of loosing seat time and unreliability. The kinematics of the suspension are one of the key things to a good handling car IMO. At the end of last season I ran my car higher which compromised the CoG but improved the kinematics over having it 'decked' If I could of run the car lower but still kept things like the roll centre's okay then it all add's up to a quicker lap time.I think even if they mods did "pay off" the increase in front end grip will be no more than what you could achieve playing with the geometry, fitting better tyres, getting better suspension - and it will be a lot more hassle
If everything else is maximised (I'm not the person to say it is or isn't in this case) mate then the mods they are making will make it better without a doubt i'm afraid! I do agree though that I wouldn't do it at the cost of loosing seat time and unreliability. The kinematics of the suspension are one of the key things to a good handling car IMO. At the end of last season I ran my car higher which compromised the CoG but improved the kinematics over having it 'decked' If I could of run the car lower but still kept things like the roll centre's okay then it all add's up to a quicker lap time.
Is it all too much for club racing?? Only each competitor can answer that and make there own mind up rather than being a sheep and copying everyone else so while I wouldn't be doing it myself if I was at the stage chase racing are but fair play to them for trying it.
I think even if they mods did "pay off" the increase in front end grip will be no more than what you could achieve playing with the geometry, fitting better tyres, getting better suspension - and it will be a lot more hassle
My car suffered from understeer as standard, the mods I have done to pretty much eliminate this are:
Pure Motorsport toe shims ( half a degree shim toe out on each side)
Around 30 mins toe out and 2.5 deg negative camber on front
Suspension (you may need stiffer rear springs)
I am developing a easy bolt on solution to raise the roll center and correct bump steer which does not effect track width or drive shaft angles. Wont be available till February due to other commitments.
IF everything else was maximised (which if they're getting loads of understeer it clearly isn't, because the burpspeed lads don't get understeer) then it might help
But it might help at the cost of custom driveshafts, custom track rod ends, custom arb links etc.. all of which will add unreliability
Fair play for trying something new but I wouldn't be doing this on a competition car.
Surely finishing every race is more important points wise than pushing for 1% more grip?
Great minds think alikeI am developing a easy bolt on solution to raise the roll center and correct bump steer which does not effect track width or drive shaft angles. Wont be available till February due to other commitments.
Interesting, I have thought about having a few kits made to change the roll centre. Would only be a trial thing and wouldn't be backed up by computer simulation or any of that jazz.
Are you doing this with Northloop cup?
These mods are pointing towards what has been with the racers except I think it could have been tackled slightly different by using cup track rods and ends (no rack spacers) extended driveshafts and rather than raising inner pivot points on the wishbones, making the adjustment on the outside with a taller and longer bottom ball joint( RCA pin) the way chase have done it is to adjust the roll centre without having the correct relation between the crossover points of tyre contacts etc of roll centre.
This is the same way I am going about raising the roll center! I cant see the need for extended drive shafts unless your changing the location of the ball joint to a position further out though.
Are you doing this with Northloop cup?
Nope this one is nothing to do with me. I have already got a kit ready to go to solve the roll centre issues. Before I even consider marketing it, I want it proven with facts and figures to back it up. This will be done by James (BigAsh) and it will be a joint venture that we will then offer out as a kit (assuming people would be interested of course.)
I can confirm that this will be available for road use and circuit use. It has already been fitted to my track car and the improvements were sublime to say the least, so the circuit improvements could prove monumentally good tbh.
Let me know how it goes.
Have you been in it? I cant remember
Had bags of understeer that day, nothing like on a big track, on a warm day and on proper tyres. Thats another lever againYes mate, you took me out for a few laps at the first llandow trackday, i can honestly say that i've never been in a car that handles like yours does!
You've certainly been busy.
Plenty scope to adjust bumpsteer now! Who did you get to weld the brackets onto the uprights? Assume it welded ok? pre-heated and cooled slowly?
One point on the gearbox mounting, that is now unquestionably the stiffest mounting on the engine&gearbox as such it will take significantly more load than the others. Hopefully it does the trick for you but I suspect the original alloy bit may be the next weakest link.
Been busy over the winter, look forward to your Brands testing update.....have you seen\looked at the Track Attack Racing Club and their new French series? We're giving that a try in April (along with Tony\Burpspeed too), hopefully no DC5's etc as in the CSCC Tintops...free to join\register this year too...for all team drivers.
TARC French series
And the forum
Some good progress. I will echo what others have said, the gearbox mount and hub setup looks questionable for strength. Neat idea on the hub for adjustability but cast metal doesn't take to being welded in high stress areas...even with the correct welding process of heating and annealing.
You can only suck it and see I suppose.
Did drivelink do your friction welding?