MikeWhitney wrote:
Great article:
http://grassrootsmotorsports.com/articl ... r-weights/FYI no tuning for understeer/oversteer is going to happen with corner weighing. That's all springs and swaybars.
If the under/over steer is worse in one direction than the other you might be able to use corner weighting to help equalize the diagonals . . . especially since the driver weight is mostly on the left front and will normally make that corner heavy and more understeery. If you add "height" to either the RF or LR coil over you put more of the front weight to the right and more of the rear weight to the left. Basically similar to what the roundy round guys do to change the balance. Think "weight jacking" but with the goal of making the car turn left or right the same.
You probably cannot make the front weights equal but you might be able to add enough weight to the left rear to take rear grip away in right turns to compensate for the heavy left front understeer. Hence, better balance.
If nothing else, you might make the car a little easier to rotate for right turns since, for me at least, it is easier to get rotation turning left than turning right, even with a symetrical car where I sit in the center.
Pay attention to anti-roll bar preload when you do this. You probably need adjustable end links.
Dick