Originally Posted by
sambb
argh got your message too late Gary - think I was close anyway. On the Esses I was starting front 29 back 30 and was ending up at 30/1/2psi all round (inc a tyre warm) and in mountain straight I was starting at 28 front 29 rear and was finishing just under 31psi all round.
So Gary super happy with the suspension. I definitely see that 3 degrees front neg whilst enough for the esses could have gone out to 3.5 for mountain straight. Now that the cars front:rear roll distribution is working the rears more equitably it was interesting to actually see consistent wear on all 4 tyres rather than seeing chundered fronts and no pressure rise in the rears. I was running 3mm toe out on the front and to be honest it didn't worry me at all and the zero toe at the back gave no surprises so I'm pretty happy to go to 2mm rear toe and take the rear camber out to 2 degrees neg now for sure. I didn't go up on the bars for mountain straight or even the dampers. The car felt very consistent and all the time was going to be in me just growing a pair really so I left it alone and just concentrated on not repeating mistakes and on resisting the urge to back out of it.
Confidence is everything, especially when you get so few runs, on cold tyres and lots of concrete around.
Before I forget, your camber gauge arrived this morning, I'll send you an email tonight when I get home to arrange a catch up.
Perfectly OK to sneak up on the rear toe out, especially with shim adjustment that's hard to adjust on the day. After you do the toe/camber it would be good to get a track day in before the next hillclimb. That way you you have some knowledge and confidence in what is going on.
I figured you would need more camber for the Mt Straight, more G = more roll.
Cheers
Gary
Golf Mk7.5 R, Volvo S60 Polestar, Skyline R32GTST
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