DickRasmussen wrote:
Tom,
In regard shock valving being too soft for the stiffer springs, the "traditional" approach to racing shocks has been to over damp the springs by introducing a lot of hydraulic "friction". However, at the top road racing levels the approach now is to minimize any source of "friction" and to run shocks softer and springs stiffer while maintaining appropriate spring and chassis movement control.
But for a stiff springs, wouldn't you need the higher shock dampening to control it?
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It is all way over my head at this point.
I know how you feel. I guess I will email lee again and see if I can ask him some more direct questions
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Best I can tell my shocks still don't result in under damping other than when I set them full soft (hence the wheel hop/oscillation over a series of bumps). Keep in mind that my car is extremely well balanced for autocrossing with no need to use shock tuning to change the balance or to compensate for soft springs, etc. like people have to do in Stock (due to rules limitations). You might check with Lee Grimes to see if the Tien shocks "give up" anything compared to what a racing Koni might be able to do . . . especially in regard to high shaft speed.
I'm sure the Teins give up a lot compared to a racing koni in the smoothness of their dampening. I also don't need to use the shocks to compensate for a spring (at least I don't think I'm doing that). I'm adjusting the rebound on the shocks to tune the transitional feel for the car. With soft rear rebound, the car "sticks" more during transitions, but with more rebound, it is a lot looser in slaloms and turn in. I still haven't figured out how to "tune" the front shocks. I just keep them 3/4 stiff unless we got in a situation like this past weekend where we turned then all the way up to try to get the car to push a little on entry as it was stupid loose.
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In regard to using stiffer springs and a softer bar to improve inside wheel traction: This has been a common tool for rear wheel drive cars for a long time and AFAIK with fwd. In many cases rwd cars don't even run a rear bar once we stiffen the springs. Think about how a bar works . . . it "wants" to unload the inside tire. Weight transfer doesn't change but the inside spring can extend more if the spring is stiffer or the bar is softer. The hard part is getting enough roll resistance with springs since bars can "easily" have very high wheel rates. However, if you significantly increase the spring rates even without changing the bar, the bar becomes a smaller percentage of the total.
I see now. Makes total sense. This could also be a reason that we are having inside wheelspin issues on my car. I have a bigger front bar then any of my STX competitors. Maybe going up to a 10K front spring would allow me to take the front bar down. How would I figure out HOW MUCH the bar affects the wheel rate?
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I've skimmed Nate Whipple's comments and they make lots of sense. A couple of thoughts: What does the rear of his Honda weigh and what are the motion ratio's compared to your car? My guess is that his car is a lot lighter in the rear and that 550 springs may still be rather stiff.
His car is about 500lbs lighter then my car and the motion ratios are definetly less. I think those might cancel out and his (wheel rate vs corner weight) might be VERY close to mine.
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I agree that balance is critical for autocrossing.
and I'm taking it one more step and saying that its definetly MORE important then rear grip.
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I finally got my almost Stock street prepared Lotus Europa to be consistently fast by raising the rear ride height with slightly stiffer stock free length springs and adding a rear sway bar. Of course it got even faster the next year when I went to lower and stiffer springs at both ends.
There is actually one guy in STS doing that same sort of theory with his 2.5RS. He is using 325F, 275R springs, with heavy compression and rebound dampening. He has the rear of the car and the rear roll center cranked way up. The car turns in great, but doesn't rotate so well out of the corner (from what I have been told

)
-Tom