Peoples views on Corner Weighting a car are quite interesting - I will try to explain in a brief response here to help people have an understanding:
Corner weighting a car
will not improve the handling of that car! - There you go - bit of a bombshell to start with!
Now let me explain the above statement;
The amount of grip the car generates is dependant on the vertical load placed on the tyre. A tyre has a performance curve and the more vertical load you place on it the more grip it will generate but it becomes less efficient (hence a lighter car can generate more cornering G force).
When a car is travelling around a circuit there are various amounts of weight transfer happening around the vehicle; note- you can never change the total amount of weigh transfer but you can effect the rate of the weight transfer.
Most weight transfers in a correctly driven vehicle happen diagonally across the vehicle. eg. entering a left hand turn the weight transfers from drivers side rear wheel to passenger side front wheel and vice versa.
Going back to the statement "The amount of grip a tyre has depends on its vertical load" we can now see that is is important we are transferring the same weights onto each of the loaded tyres so they have the same grip when cornering.
As previously stated the majority of weight transfers during circuit driving (there are very few steady state corners in the UK) happen diagonally across the vehicle so it is important you get the weights across each diagonal the same and this is called a 50% cross weight.
If the cross weights are
NOT equal then your car will have either more grip when turning left or turning right.
A good indication that the corner weights of a vehicle are not correct is when a driver will come into the pits and say to us " The car is perfect in left handers but understeers in right handers" - unfortunately there is no adjustments you can make to the chassis to improve this situation - if you remove the understeer from the right hand corners the car will oversteer in the left hand corners.
If the corner weighting is correct the driver will say that the car is good or it either understeers or oversteers in both directions and this is then easy to correct changing set-up such as ride heights or roll bar stiffness etc.
So.............Corner weighting will make the car handle the same in left and right hand corners but it's main advantage is that it allows the chassis tuner to effectively delete the handling characteristic (understeer or oversteer) effectively - it does not improve the handling on its own.
Now.................. as stated previously we can not change the total weight transfer but the rate of that transfer depends on the dampers and springs fitted (plus to a varying degree other components). Unfortunately even the best dampers are not matched and if you are serious about your corner weighting then you need to get the dampers matched otherwise you might as well have different springs on every corner of your car.
We dyno the dampers in house for the various Clio Cup cars we set up prior to them being Corner weighted; this ensures that the dampers are matched across each axle and the weight transfer rates will be the same - these are not cheap dampers either; they are supplied by Ohlins but still require matching. If the rate of the weight transfer is not the same then, again the car will have different levels of grip at each phase of the corner.
Below is an example of a damper dyno plot taken from our damper dyno showing the range of adjustment on a Force Vs Velocity graph:
Having a set-up done to this level becomes expensive - yes it will ultimately improve your car but the returns are diminishing! We like to be honest with our customers and offer a service we think is best suited to their needs - we could quite easily say you need this and that doing and take your money for corner weighting but we think you should make this decision on an informed basis.
We offer bespoke chassis set-ups at all levels so we are prepared to do whatever you want -
Its your car in the end of the day but we like to discuss these matters with you - usually a good Geo will get you 85% of the performance and for the occasional track day attendee we personally feel you should use the extra money towards another track day and have more fun, if you compete at a very high level then you would need everything doing as the various race teams that use our services do.
We do have a certified 'flat floor' for all our geo and Corner weighting and this is level to within 0.5 mm across it's full plane - this is vital for this level of vehicle set-up. We are always willing to show callibration certificates for this equipment and they are on display at out workshop.
This is very brief and complete books could/have been written on it but I hope it gives an understanding as to why we recommend certain levels of Geo.
Thanks for reading
Fraser