Originally Posted by
sambb
They should be ok. The main problem comes from the angled bush casings. In top view they are probably at 45 degrees to each other and in front view the casings angle upwards toward the rear seat bases slightly too. The crush tubes will allow up down articulation ok within a given range but then the angle of the bushes starts to force the bush to distort and then the poly, even just for up/down movement starts to lock up. Laterally I think they'll be unreal with no more of that detached rear end sog like before.
Yeah I had read a bit about droop limiters, everything literally from cables to internal damper ones, but figured I'd just go for more roll resistance from the twist beam than from the springs. Apparently limiters can be a bit abrupt in the way they limit droop (only read it have no experience) but if the bushes act to limit droop which I think they will (car is still on jacks with the beam just hanging there level with the ground) then hopefully its nice and progressive.
I just got the rear calipers back and don't know whether to slap it all together and go for a drive or leave it all in pieces and just wait for the coilovers to arrive. I think I'd rather drive it now so that I have a good before and after reference for what the beam is doing rahther than change everything at once but that means garage time tonight and I'm sick as. I'll see how I go.
We use droop limiters on a number of race cars (mostly FWD and 4WD Production Cars where often the regs don't allow us to change the swaybars) , the most common method is an internal bump stop which can be selected to give some progression. This is not as abrupt as say a solid travel limiter like an alloy block or a steel strap. It's also handy to have adjustable rebound damping which can slow down the travel so that it takes longer than the wheel is unloaded to reach maximum droop. Plus it also can assist with a soft stop when it hits the travel limiter. Many ways to skin that cat.
I'll be interested in how reinforcing the torsion beam works out in regards to the anti roll rate. Personally I'd prefer to mount the swaybar on the body and have drop links to the control arms, no unsprung weight at all then, plus it gives anti roll adjustment which on the rear of a FWD car is a great handling tuning device. But I like the simplicity (and low cost) of your method.
Cheers
Gary
Golf Mk7.5 R, Volvo S60 Polestar, Skyline R32GTST
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