When are you rolling this one?
Best track in the country, brilliant for small low power cars like the 500/clio.
Mansfield is so scary though
Best track in the country, brilliant for small low power cars like the 500/clio.
Mansfield is so scary though
Oh, you should of bought that track day from me, got a couple of easytrack days for sale!
It handles terribly on the road but on track it is awesome!!
Glad you enjoyed it, but really hope you didn't go out with front tyres cold at 27psi. When I worked for Abarth on the Trofeo cars, we ran them at 28psi on Michelin racing slicks which have solid sidewalls, not soft road tyres which will roll on turn in, overheat the tread block as everything moves about, and generally destroy the tyre.
You should go out at highest cold pressure recommended by the manufacturer as a guide, I think the 500 is 34psi for traveling at speeds exceeding 160klms, then build some heat into them then lower to stabilize. Track day tyres like 888 again have much stiffer sidewalls for this purpose, hence you can run slightly lower pressures.
I believe you have the car mixed up. It's a brilliant car at 7 or 8 tenths, but push it beyond and it unravels. Hence it being a great road car to make swift entertaining travel, but not a true drivers car or track orientated car in the slightest.
Having driven the 500 Abarth round Rockingham International long, & Jamie86's Clio round Cadwell, TBH if the Clio is driven to it's capacity the 500 wouldn't get near. It understates terribly, has overservo'd brakes that fade badly and get so hot the red painted calipers turn black, the rear end goes way too light under braking as well, the steering wheel is far too thick and has too many shapes to it, and gearchange not very slick.
And Dave Quinn (i know you go on Abarth forum so know who he is) in his 215bhp 500 couldn't keep up with me in our 160bhp 500, so wasn't hanging about when I made these conclusions. Though to be fair he was such a poor driver he overheated his brakes on the sighting laps at Rockingham which is a first for me.
i dont want knois as they arn't height adjustable, and everyone has got them....ideally a set of KWs are in the pipeline, fully adjustable so i can get my 'stance' on if needed
so Koni's arent good if everyone has them?
Our 500 runs AVO height adjustable mono-tube dampers with integrated bump stops & ride/control is improved beyond measure. Also some Eibach front camber bolts with -1degrees camber & 10mins total toe out. It also has 17" team dynamics ProRace wheels which are lighter than the OEM 16" wheels. The 17" OEM wheels are ridiculously heavy blunting front end feel even further.
One issue is the strange steering which although a quick rack is devoid of any feedback or feel, and feels like you are fighting magnets, not an issue on track but obvious on the road. It's further not helped by a steering wheel far too thick & with too many panels in its construction, it really should be thinner & simpler to aid feedback.
The gearchange is not as slick as the 6speed in the 1.4 500 as it's an Alfa box with long throw, plus I find the articulation to be bit off as you reach over the top of the arc going vertically through the gears. The position is similar to an EP3 Type-R but with none of the positive action or precision across the gate.
but main issue is stupid rear bumpstops which give approx 15mm of rear suspension travel on a normal car and about 10pm on an SS car. It therefore bottoms out and bounces about at the rear. It is also underdsmped as standard almost like the fequency of the dampers is out of synch with the springs. The Koni dampers are good but don't fix bump stop issue. You can either remove & throw away or fit the shorter Fiat Coupe items which fit & are about 50mm shorter & just rubber, as standard they are really long and made from 80% solid plastic neaning no give when car bottoms out.
The chassis has bags of grip and you learn to believe in it, & engine is a real peach being really punchy if a bit asthmatic at higher revs meaning you drive on the torque & change up early not chase the redline like you do in a Clio, but it's not a true drivers car.
The Clio on track was much more adjustable, much more feedback given, with more predictable brake pedal & ultimately more fun and rewarding to drive both on track and the road.
The 500 is a real laugh out loud funny car up to 7 or 8 tenths, but unravels above this and gets rough round the edges as it's flaws are harshly exposed.
I can't see where he said they aren't good? He said they aren't height adjustable.
It looks good mate.