Richard Casto wrote:
Keith Quistorff wrote:
To clarify, my statement was that a bigger bar would offer no additional grip when a smaller bar already lifts the inside front tire.
I pretty much agree with you that once that wheel is off the ground it doesn't have any additional impact on weight transfer, ...
I'm not sure I totally buy that argument. I tend to think there are way to many variables at work to make blanket statements like that and I've definitely seen instances where more bar and the resulting higher/sooner wheel liftoff makes the car faster. I'm sure Chuck's BMW is way stiffer than the flexi-flier chassis I was dealing with so it probably reacts differently but the only way to know for sure is to experiment.
And by experiment, I don't just mean bolt stuff on and see how it reacts. As Sam noted, you really need to adjust other things to regain any lost balance and that is often overlooked. If you run out of adjustments to regain lost balance within whatever parameters/rule set you are dealing with, it may be time to take a step back.
I tend to agree with Donnie's assessment that perhaps Sam didn't explore every option and he is perhaps very good at driving around issues but only he knows for sure. Driver feel and confidence definitely plays a huge role in all this.
After reading a couple of Chuck's responses, if he is only having big trouble with wheel spin in first gear, it's probably not worth chasing. If the car puts down power well in second gear and seems balanced for the moment, I'd stick with the shock upgrade route for now.
Jim