JamesFeinberg wrote:
My specs:
-3,-2.5 F/R camber
3 F caster <-- I'll be adding more of this next week, trying to get ~5
1/8 out, 0 F/R toe
I'd have to agree and disagree with Mike in that you want to optimize the front end but the rear should be used to tune the balance. This is for FWD *only* but the approach I use is to get as much front grip as possible and then toss away (or add) rear grip until the car is balanced nicely. That usually means that the rear is far from "optimal" but we are just dragging those tires around anyway.
Agree and disagree

Back in my Honda Challenge racing days, the cars were tuned the same as RWD -- with springs. If the car was pushing, add rear spring rate, don't throw away grip with camber or pressure. (for those watching at home, remember that adding rear spring actually INCREASES front grip). In a totally developed FWD race car, I have to believe they have camber and pressure set for optimal grip at all 4 corners.
But the point I was making is -- in a class with suspension allowances, you don't have to deo stupid stock class tricks to get a car to rotate. You're allowed to make changes to actually use more of the tire and balance the car with parts.
Just because a Mini wants zero camber in the back doesn't mean it's optimal. It's a band-aid
JamesFeinberg wrote:
I also don't believe that you should shoot for even temps across the face of the tires due to the fact that they cool off so quickly. Unless you have some way of measuring temps dynamically, I'd look for the inside edge to run several degrees hotter than the middle with the outer edge being the coolest. Can --> Worms --> Danger!
Jim
Fair enough. But it's better than nothing! I ran a skidpad at Laurinburg a few years back -- drove in a circle until I was dizzy then jumped out and IRed the tire. Not optimal but I learned a lot from the experiment. I learned what was too much pressure, too little, whether the car was balanced, and that 2.5 degrees camber up front was not enough on an E30.
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Mike Whitney
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V10, V8, V8t, I6, I6, V6, F4t, I4, I4, I4, I4, I2, 1, 1