It's all the little things that add up to the extra speed, that's what Production Car racing teaches, a 10 second per lap improvement from a bunch of what look like inconsequential changes when viewed in isolation. I used to get my wife to sit in the driver's seat when corner weighting and wheel aligning. Then I could tell her with all honesty that the car was set up just for her.
There is a school of thought that having zero droop in the rear of a FWD car is an advantage. It's not one that I subscribe too as it limits the braking effort with other methods achieving the same or a better result. Consequently I stick to the 70/30 travel rule of thumb, even on the rear, with 70% of the total travel allocated to bump and 30% allocated to droop. That usually results in being able to have some spring preload at full droop which helps limit rear inside wheel lock up under brakes.
We always run the most rear swaybar at Eastern Creek, it's needed for the high speed corners.
Cheers
Gary
Golf Mk7.5 R, Volvo S60 Polestar, Skyline R32GTST
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