Originally Posted by
sambb
yeah definitely became aware that 200lb/in was too soft for the softs/mediums that I've run - Just a road reg competitor though so all on a shoe string budget. Yeah the damper mount point is well behind the spring seat and hub position on my car.
I'd have to measure it to be accurate but my guess is around 0.8 to 1 movement ratio and 0.8 to 1 leverage ratio, so the 200 lbs/inch at the spring would be 200 X 0.8 X 0.8 = 128 lbs/inch at the wheel (what the tyre feels). That's a slightly sporty road car rate.
The damping intricacies that result from that I leave in the capable hands of Josh. I will get on to him re the relationship between bump and rebound and each click setting. I'm guessing he's a tad busy with the WTAC car at the minute though so that one can wait at least until I get the fronts in.
Not that you can change the ratio, but it is important to know, so that you can give him feedback. In simple terms if you adjust say the fronts to give you more rebound (so that the weight doesn't transfer as fast off the front when you lift off the brakes) you need to know how much that affects the bump (too much of which may make it understeer on corner exit, which is what you are trying to overcome).
As it is the MCA's are 8kg fronts, 6kg rears. He initially wanted me to run 9kg fronts and 8kg rears but with the standard 20mm front bar and no rear bar. When I explained to him that I wanted to run a rear bar (cos I just couldnt see that not happening) he came back and suggested the 8:6kg split. Of the 8:6kg split he said that despite the different motion ratio on the rears that further soften the rear spring rate, that relative to the front and the weight that it is carrying that it is still a rear stiff setup especially when you factor in the rear bar. As it is rear springs are 100 bucks for a set so I can up the rear spring rate cheaply/easily down the track if need be so I was happy to take his lead.
The front struts on the Polo (like most VW's) have ~0.9 movement and leverage ratios, and I think 9kg's (504 lbs/inch) is far too high a spring rate (408 lbs/inch at the tyre). There's not any R /semi slick that likes that much spring on our rough tracks, especially on the front of a FWD car. Even 8kg/mm (362 lbs/inch at the tyre) is still a bit high, personally I'd run 7kgs/mm on the front.
I know Josh (and Murray) have a preference for higher spring rates and lower anti roll rates, but that comes from the vast rally car experience plus the days back when we weren't allowed to change the swaybars on Production race Cars, so we had to use the spring rates instead. Pretty much every race car (where it's allowed in the regs) have driver adjustable swaybars, that's because they are the easiest method of tuning the handling balance. It's pretty hard to pull a pit stop in the middle of a race to swap spring rates. This is the same philosophy as us being at a hillclimb, it's much easier between runs to adjust the swaybars than swap springs.
Keeping the above in mind, I wouldn't be running 8/6 springs rates. I'd be looking at something like 7/8, that should give around 317 lbs/inch on the front and 286 lbs/inch on the rear (at the tyre of course). Obviously it's important to confirm the movement and leverage ratios first though.
Cheers
Gary
Golf Mk7.5 R, Volvo S60 Polestar, Skyline R32GTST
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