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IRS vs SRA
Gre3D - 13/1/19 at 10:53 AM

Hi Guys,

i've been thinking of changing my locost's baby atlas rear axle to IRS,

when i use the car at the moment ( trackdays only) i feel like there's a lot of flex in the shafts inside the atlas axle, this flex is very noticeable when i put the car on the trailer and put straps on the wheels
my tyres tend to wear out only on the outer side of the wheel, while the rest stays like new. i've tried changing tyre pressure ( went up to 2.6bar cold)
i had mat at procomp make me a new set of shocks and listened to his advice. very nive guy, was very helpfull! but the tyres keep wearing out very uneven, even though i've been told the a solid rear axle would give an IRS car a serious run for its money i can't help but think that converting it to IRS is the way to go.
the abillity to control toe and camber seems like a huge benefit to me.

so i'm wondering now what the best to do is, upgrade the standard atlas axle driveshafts with stiffer Quaife driveshafts which might sort my problem or convert the whole thing to IRS. i'm also a bit bothered by the bit that the atlas axle is constantly leaking oil inside the wheels despite the fact that i've changed the bearings and oil seals more then once (probably due to the flexing of the shafts?)
i also think an IRS setup would be a tad lighter then the atlas axle i have now?
what do you guys think?
sorry if this has been discussed before but i can't seem to find anything on the subject on here

[Edited on 13/1/19 by Gre3D]


britishtrident - 13/1/19 at 04:20 PM

There is a heat shrinking trick that was used by american stock car racers to put a small amount of negative camber on a live axle exactly same method as used to correct toe on a live axle except of course apply heat the top of the axle not the front or rear.