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Author: Subject: Lo cost corner weighting
uklee70

posted on 16/8/09 at 05:26 PM Reply With Quote
Lo cost corner weighting

Hi all

I'm looking for a lo cost way of setting my car up with me in the driver seat.

Has anyone got a cheap solution they could talk me through.

Thanks

Lee

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AdrianH

posted on 16/8/09 at 05:31 PM Reply With Quote
You mean beside sets of bathroom scales and a mate to read them.

It really depends on the weight of the car and you in it as most scales will only go up to 150 Kg each, so if combination is over 600 Kg then you will want 8 scales!

There must be a way using water pressure and areas of pistons under each tyre, but would be expensive to get the pistons.

So find somewhere that will do it for you I would suggest.

Adrian

[Edited on 16-8-09 by AdrianH]





Why do I have to make the tools to finish the job? More time then money.

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mistergrumpy

posted on 16/8/09 at 05:32 PM Reply With Quote
If you do a search there's a few ideas explained already. I think one of them was to replace your weight with a bag of sand (or two!) in th drivers seat and to have two sets of scales per wheel, bridged with a piece of wood and go from there.
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Steve Hignett

posted on 16/8/09 at 05:52 PM Reply With Quote
What sort of money would you consider a "cheap option"? - I know that free is cheap etc, but wondered whether you had a budget in mind that you would be willing to pay to get your car to handle the way it should...






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mark chandler

posted on 16/8/09 at 06:01 PM Reply With Quote
4 x homebase scales for me as its a BEC

Okay accuracy may be rubbish for weight, however you are looking fpr comparison so load them and zero at you target weight.

You then need somewhere really flat, I laid out boards where the wheels/scales would stand and packed under with sand until perfect.

The weight transfer is quite amazing when you mate sits in the car and moves about!!!

Another way is to use the power of levers, make something with a pivot near the wheel and a bracket so you can pick up the wheels in turn, then work your way around measuring the load to pick each wheel up.

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MikeCapon

posted on 16/8/09 at 06:02 PM Reply With Quote
If you don't mind the time it takes you can get by with one set of scales and three blocks of the same height. Much longer but much cheapness.
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mad-butcher

posted on 16/8/09 at 06:10 PM Reply With Quote
I'm not normally one for singing someones praises that I haven't dealt with, BUT I beleive Procomp offer a reasonably priced service (onsidering the length of time it takes) I spent close on a day doing mine with bathroom scales.

tony

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daviep

posted on 16/8/09 at 06:34 PM Reply With Quote
200kg Scales are available relatively cheaply on eBay, £65 will get you 4x Salter 200kg Scales.

Cheers
Davie

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Volvorsport

posted on 16/8/09 at 06:39 PM Reply With Quote
axle stand about hub height , mark the position equally from all 4 wheels .

long bar about 1 metre long , insert into hub , using axle stand as pivot , lift wheel (in the same place each time) and 'feel' the weight . we did the initial setup on darrians like this .

you can also build your own corner weight gauge with some box section and a pressure gauge , a la staniforth .

HTH





www.dbsmotorsport.co.uk
getting dirty under a bus

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StevieB

posted on 16/8/09 at 07:19 PM Reply With Quote
Me and my mate bought 8 sets of bathroom scales from Tesco at about £2.50 each. Put two under each wheel - it works fine.
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paulf

posted on 16/8/09 at 09:12 PM Reply With Quote
I intend making something to lift one wheel at a time and have a 250kg capacity load cell from some industrial scales, but havent yet worked out how to get an output I can display on a meter from it.
Paul.
quote:
Originally posted by Volvorsport
axle stand about hub height , mark the position equally from all 4 wheels .

long bar about 1 metre long , insert into hub , using axle stand as pivot , lift wheel (in the same place each time) and 'feel' the weight . we did the initial setup on darrians like this .

you can also build your own corner weight gauge with some box section and a pressure gauge , a la staniforth .

HTH

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mad4x4

posted on 17/8/09 at 06:51 AM Reply With Quote
Load cell will possible have a 4-20 millamp range of use you muiltimeter and a +28v Supply and you will get an answer in 4-20mA then use y=mx+c to convert into KG's (you will need to know the full range of the sensor)

or aleast know weights .





Scot's do it better in Kilts.

MK INDY's Don't Self Centre Regardless of MK Setting !

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Johneturbo

posted on 17/8/09 at 06:35 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by daviep
200kg Scales are available relatively cheaply on eBay, £65 will get you 4x Salter 200kg Scales.

Cheers
Davie


Digital would be nice to use, but would they auto turn off.

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