Originally Posted by
sambb
I remember Ortiz mentioned that relationship between roll centre and COG with the VW twist beam and gave me some pretty detailed instructions on how to draw it out but I got the feeling he was referring to the rabbit/golf Mk 4beam which is admittedly very similar to mine. I can't remember if he said the roll centre was located 1/4 of the way down from the twist beam or a 1/4 of the way up toward the twist beam from the ground. Like you say its going to matter a lot what I do with that so I'll have to dig out his emails and get super familiar with it. I took the car for another good drive today and there are no lurking vices (yet) which I'm happy with. Its not doing anything funny or strange or unexpected it just feels right, so I cant wait to run it on the track soon and get a better gauge on how its affected things.
One thing I forgot to mention is that once my current fronts die I'm going to go back to running 205/50/15 at the front but stay with 195/55/15 at the back. Later on I may go to the 205's all round but I've always wanted to try running like this.
Yeah it'd be great to catch up somewhere - are you doing rounds of the NSW state series or club stuff next year? What car do you run in if you do hillclimbs - maybe I've seen you before.
Mark's wording for calculating the CoR for a twist beam takes a bit of interpreting, I had to draw it several times before it clicked. It would have been quicker if he had drawn it. I'm not going to attempt to better his words, but if/when we catch up I'll draw it for you.
I'm sure you know, but just in case, I'd suggest keeping an eye on the welds for the reinforcing of the twist beam. They work a lot, so they will eventually crack, you can count on it.
Personally I'm not a fan of different sized tyres front to rear on a FWD. Firstly for practical reasons if you, say, flat spot a front you can't just quickly swap for a rear. Mostly though for handling reasons, it's really a band aid, if it helps then there is something else wrong. I'd always suggest fixing what it is that's wrong not sticking a band aid over it. In long, high speed, high lateral G force corners with positive longitudinal G force the required amount of rear grip is pretty close to the front. Not so much in short, low speed corners though.
I've been doing mostly circuit race engineering for a few teams for the last 6 years, Sports Car 12 Hour (Porsche and Audi), Production Car 6 Hour (BMW), Formula 3 (Dallara) and Improved Production (FWD and RWD). Plus data review, driver coaching, long distance race strategy and overall team management. So I haven't had much spare time to work on my own car. I've almost completed a long term upgrade to the R32GTST, added about 1.1 litres of engine capacity which should add 300 bhp or so, which of course meant a larger gearbox, fuel system upgrade, change to E85, bigger winged sump, oil cooler, intercooler, bigger brakes, waste gate, titanium exhaust etc etc. It's just about ready for a dyno run, the oil is in the sump, there's E85 in the fuel tank and the water is in the radiator. I don't have the schedule for the race teams next year as yet but I want to, at the very least, fit in a Bathurst Hillclimb weekend and maybe a round or 2 of the Nulon Nationals.
Cheers
Gary
Golf Mk7.5 R, Volvo S60 Polestar, Skyline R32GTST
Bookmarks