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Author: Subject: Handling
LBMEFM

posted on 6/9/09 at 03:14 PM Reply With Quote
Handling

I am getting used to driving my MK Indy-Blade, performance brill, but the handling is still unsteady. I have now lowered the ride to its lowest, the front and rear wheels have been tracked parallel, got 1 degree camber on front and back, tyre pressures 23 front 26 rear with 5 clicks on the dampers. I have tried several other settings but its still wrong, At high speed it drifts where it likes with very light steering and in tight corners the rear wants to break away. I have done a lot of sprinting in the past and not a stranger to fast driving but this car is a bit of a worry. Any ideas?
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Davg

posted on 6/9/09 at 03:16 PM Reply With Quote
Drop the tyre pressures to around 15- 16 & will notice an improvement.
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philw

posted on 6/9/09 at 03:20 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Davg
Drop the tyre pressures to around 15- 16 & will notice an improvement.


Depends on the tyres, but 23/26 iis too high

[Edited on [1252250537R0=033030p: by philw]





Must try harder

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Flamez

posted on 6/9/09 at 03:21 PM Reply With Quote
Jack the back up several cm higher than front to distribute load to front.


Mine is set with 3 clicks allround and 18-20psi





my build mac1motorsports

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britishtrident

posted on 6/9/09 at 03:31 PM Reply With Quote
Check your Toe-in front and rear --- you must have some toe-in on the rear and it is better to to have a little on the front. Toe in on the rear is very effective reducing any tendency to snap oversteer. Toe-in on the front makes the car less jittery in a straight line.

Camber should be 0.5 to 1.5 degree negative try 0.5 on the front 1.5 on the rear

Soften the dampers off a couple clicks same goes for tyres you have light car the dampers and tyres need to be soft but I don't think this is the main problem.

If that dosen't work you need to alter the roll couple distribution ie either by the spring rates ( make front harder or rear softer) or add front anti-roll bar.

The other easy way to reduce oversteer is alter the tyre & rim sizes --- fit narrower fronts or wider rears your car will have a reward weight bias so doing this makes a lot of sense. The preferred option would be make the fronts narrower.


[Edited on 6/9/09 by britishtrident]





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Steve Hignett

posted on 6/9/09 at 04:04 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by britishtrident
Check your Toe-in front and rear --- you must have some toe-in on the rear and it is better to to have a little on the front. Toe in on the rear is very effective reducing any tendency to snap oversteer. Toe-in on the front makes the car less jittery in a straight line.

Camber should be 0.5 to 1.5 degree negative try 0.5 on the front 1.5 on the rear

Soften the dampers off a couple clicks same goes for tyres you have light car the dampers and tyres need to be soft but I don't think this is the main problem.

If that dosen't work you need to alter the roll couple distribution ie either by the spring rates ( make front harder or rear softer) or add front anti-roll bar.

The other easy way to reduce oversteer is alter the tyre & rim sizes --- fit narrower fronts or wider rears your car will have a reward weight bias so doing this makes a lot of sense. The preferred option would be make the fronts narrower.


[Edited on 6/9/09 by britishtrident]


As above, but what's your ride height front and rear?






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Stuart_B

posted on 6/9/09 at 04:24 PM Reply With Quote
i have my trye pressure at 18 all round, and ride height is 3inch at the front from the sump and 6inch at the back.





black mk indy, 1.6pinto on cbr600 bike carb's.

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iank

posted on 6/9/09 at 07:26 PM Reply With Quote
Worth checking procomp's posts on this thread about tyre pressures.

http://www.locostbuilders.co.uk/viewthread.php?tid=117679





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