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Author: Subject: First drive, but no self centering!
Mave

posted on 13/5/06 at 11:04 AM Reply With Quote
First drive, but no self centering!

Yesterday I took my car over to a place where I could drive it for the first time, and have it checked over.
During the drive it became clear that the car didn't self-center at all! I have the mushroom with the hole all the way to the front, so castor angle is maximized.
I thought toe-in might help the self centering, so we tried that, but to no avail. Maybe I should have tried toe out also. I've just read that some people put it on extreme toe out angles just to pass SVA, and turn it back to neutral after the test. But surely that leaves the car handling to be desired, right?

How do I solve this? I have the "old" round tube wishbones, but does the new "flat oval" design have a different geometry?

If not; can the problem be solved with other top wishbones? To give the car more castor?

The guy also let me drive a Striker, which did self center perfectly. And I must say that that gave much more confidence going around corners fast.

I know some use springs around the steering rack, but isn't that a bad fix to a bad design? Of course, I want to get it through SVA first, and this might help. But in the end I do want a great handling car.

Marcel

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donut

posted on 13/5/06 at 11:07 AM Reply With Quote
I have been told 0.5 or 1 digrees toe OUT for self centering.

Maybe people can post what they set theirs to for SVA.





Andy

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stevec

posted on 13/5/06 at 11:45 AM Reply With Quote
Im confused.com now, All the stuff I have read says hole to the front.






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britishtrident

posted on 13/5/06 at 11:46 AM Reply With Quote
Offset mushrooms don't have ANY effect on caster all that can change caster is the relative position of the upper and lower balljoints.


However offset mushrooms can be used to alter the king pin inclination, and they also have an effect on bump steeer.

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tks

posted on 13/5/06 at 12:19 PM Reply With Quote
As far as i know

For better self centering you need to do this:



For better response you need to do the oposide. I refer to this only on the vieuw from above.

The vieuw from front of the car is more bumpsteer/car load relative...

Sow i would let it go 0 degrees (from front) and 1 from above to each other..

Then you have got self centering and not the bad tyre wear... Rescued attachment SelfCentering.JPG
Rescued attachment SelfCentering.JPG






The above comments are always meant to be from the above persons perspective.

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Mave

posted on 13/5/06 at 01:19 PM Reply With Quote
I think the mushroom insert change both king pin inclination and caster angle. King pin inclination angle refers to the relative positions of upper and lower balljoint when looking from the front, right? And caster is the same, but then looking from the side, right? (please correct me if I'm wrong).

So if you put the off-centre hole to the front, you have maximized the caster, and king pin inclination in the middle. If you put the off-set hole to the outbd. side, you have maximized the king pin inclination and put caster in the middle.

TKS: if I understand correctly; if I give it more negative camber, that would also help?

Marcel

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nitram38

posted on 13/5/06 at 02:04 PM Reply With Quote
READ THIS CLICK HERE

Should help you all!

With your top ball joint forward towards the front o the car you will get unwanted positive castor. For self centering the top ball joit should be further back towards the rear of the car. This will give you negative castor and self centering.

Race cars should have 3-6 degrees and roadcars 6-12 degrees of negative castor.

[Edited on 13/5/2006 by nitram38]

[Edited on 13/5/2006 by nitram38]






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britishtrident

posted on 13/5/06 at 02:55 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Mave
I think the mushroom insert change both king pin inclination and caster angle. King pin inclination angle refers to the relative positions of upper and lower balljoint when looking from the front, right? And caster is the same, but then looking from the side, right? (please correct me if I'm wrong).

So if you put the off-centre hole to the front, you have maximized the caster, and king pin inclination in the middle. If you put the off-set hole to the outbd. side, you have maximized the king pin inclination and put caster in the middle.

TKS: if I understand correctly; if I give it more negative camber, that would also help?

Marcel


No mushrooms have nothing to do with caster - to find out the reasons use the forum search it has been brought up several times. To get some reasonable caster when viewed from above the upper ball joint should trail the lower one by 25mm.

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britishtrident

posted on 13/5/06 at 03:04 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by nitram38
READ THIS CLICK HERE

Should help you all!

With your top ball joint forward towards the front o the car you will get unwanted positive castor. For self centering the top ball joit should be further back towards the rear of the car. This will give you negative castor and self centering.

Race cars should have 3-6 degrees and roadcars 6-12 degrees of negative castor.

[Edited on 13/5/2006 by nitram38]

[Edited on 13/5/2006 by nitram38]


Love to see anybody even Schumy try to drive a RWD drive car with 12 degrees of negative caster and keep running straight.

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britishtrident

posted on 13/5/06 at 03:40 PM Reply With Quote
Caster 101

Almost all cars have posative caster that is when viewed from the side the line joining the top and bottom ball joints slopes towards the rear of the car.

Only a very few FWD cars for example real Minis & Metros use the opposite negative caster.

Light cars need more posative caster than heavy cars. Ammount of caster required also depends on weight distribution -- less weight on front wheels demands more caster.

Big downside of caster is it makes the steering heavy in turns -- try throwing heavy car with a fair bit of caster for example an MGB round a tight roundabout and see how the steering loads up.

Radial tyres produce a self-aligning torque which reduces the ammount of of caster required compared to that on a car running on crossply tyres. However if the tyre presures are too high for the vehicle weight this self-aligning torque is no longer created.

What actually creates the self centering action due to caster is the distance the centre of tyre contact patch trails the point that the imaginary line joining the upper and lower ball joints (called by designers the virtual kin pin) intersects the road surface.

On some cars (particularly classic era rear engined RWD cars) this trail was added to by offsetting the king pin line 12 to 25 mm or so ahead of the of the stub axle centre line, just as on a furniture caster, but this is best avoided even if it were possible to apply it to Locost.


Some typical caster angles

Honda Accord/Rover 600 +2 degrees

Jaguar E Type & XJ6 2.25 degres
MG Midget/AH Sprite +3 degrees
Triumph Spitfire & 19 60s Lotus Elan +4 degrees.
MGB +7 degrees
Opel Manta (RWD) +3.5 degree
Porsche 911 +6.5 degree

[Edited on 13/5/06 by britishtrident]

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DIY Si

posted on 13/5/06 at 03:44 PM Reply With Quote
So what should we be aiming at for a reasonable amount of self centreing? I'd obviuosly like enough to self centre but not so much the steering is overly heavy and the handling suffers.
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Jasper

posted on 13/5/06 at 04:05 PM Reply With Quote
I just put a whole load of toe out for SVA (not very scientific I know, but it was a visible amount), and even then it only self centred a bit. Then once you're through SVA get it set up properly.
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Mave

posted on 13/5/06 at 05:41 PM Reply With Quote
Hmm, just made a little sketch, and you're absolutely right; the mushrooms don't affect the caster angle, at all, since (looking from the side) the angle the balljoints make relative to eachother doesn't change. They do however change the caster offset. Putting the holes to the front increases the caster offset. That should make the car more stable, right? But might not have huge effect on self centering?

My distributor, who also races the Indy, told me today to put the holes in the mushrooms to the outside. That would increase the king pin offset (and more negative camber). But what affect would that have? Britishtrident? (I'm seriously interested)

This is all getting really theoretical (like it though), but in the end what I need is a good, confidence inspiring car. I have never driven another Indy, but from all the posts on this forum about the (lack of) self centering of Indy's, I would say that a redesigned top wishbone might be just what the car needs. Am I right?

Marcel

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greggors84

posted on 13/5/06 at 05:55 PM Reply With Quote
I think what the mushrooms inserts do is change the angle of the hubs when it rotates. But the hubs are still rotating around the vertical plane. As the bottom and top ball joints are still inline when view from above.

What needs to be done is move the top ball joint back so that the hub is moving around an axis that is off the vertical.

I think this is why the mushrooms dont make any difference, i know BT has been saying it for ages, i have just been trying to work out why.

Am i close? Or does it not make any sense!





Chris

The Magnificent 7!

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Mave

posted on 13/5/06 at 06:01 PM Reply With Quote
That's exactly how I see it. They need to move to the back; in other words; redesigned wishbones. But there must be a lot of Indy's on the road as it is; how do the drivers feel about it? Don't they have self-centering, do they have it (if yes: how did they manage to get it), have they fitted something like springs on the rack?

Marcel

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greggors84

posted on 13/5/06 at 06:08 PM Reply With Quote
Just to add, if you want real castor the best way is new wishbones, Ace Sportcars do some with rod ends, you can then use shims or washers to mount these further backwards. This is what i will be doing when i get the chance.

As seen in this thread.

http://www.locostbuilders.co.uk/viewthread.php?tid=42581

Have some post disappeared or is it just me?

[Edited on 13/5/2006 by greggors84]





Chris

The Magnificent 7!

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zetec

posted on 13/5/06 at 07:09 PM Reply With Quote
For the SVA I needed loads of toe out...but a few weeks ago I reset to no toe in/out and now the rack and balljoints have freed up a little (5000 miles) the self centreing is OK and I find the car just right. Tyre presures also have an effect, I run 16-18psi.





" I only registered to look at the pictures, now I'm stuck with this username for the rest of my life!"

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nitram38

posted on 13/5/06 at 07:16 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by britishtrident
Almost all cars have posative caster that is when viewed from the side the line joining the top and bottom ball joints slopes towards the rear of the car.

Only a very few FWD cars for example real Minis & Metros use the opposite negative caster.




I think that you have got this the wrong way around. Taken from the link thingy:

Castor

Castor is quite important for steering feedback and self centring, the reason that castor affects steering so much is that castor (king pin inclination) causes the swivel plane of the front hub to vary from the vertical as the hub rotates, this has the effect of raising the car slightly, negative castor I.E. king pin inclined back at the top causes the car to rise upwards as the hubs are rotated from the straight ahead position. This gives steering 'feel' and a strong tendency toward self-centring, with the weight of the car itself providing the self centring effect, excessive castor will make the steering very heavy as it will tend to raise the car more. Positive castor has the opposite effect, self-centring is lost, the steering becomes light and 'wandery'.

[Edited on 13/5/2006 by nitram38]






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britishtrident

posted on 14/5/06 at 10:21 AM Reply With Quote
Caster angle not "castor" angle --- don't take anything off the web as gospel without a sanity check, the fact the main subject is wrongly spelled should ring alarm bells.

Also note that king pin inclination and caster angle are very different although to an extent inter related.


[Edited on 14/5/06 by britishtrident]

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Peteff

posted on 14/5/06 at 01:38 PM Reply With Quote
It says castor on the printout I got from the tyre centre.





yours, Pete

I went into the RSPCA office the other day. It was so small you could hardly swing a cat in there.

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JoelP

posted on 14/5/06 at 04:05 PM Reply With Quote
the mushroom effect has been worked out several times before. Turning the insert indeed doesnt affect the castor angle, but it does move your contact patch forward and back (by about 1 cm at the extremes) this affects the distance between your contact patch and your virtual KP line on the ground, and hence should add slightly to selfcentering. It also changes your wheel base, your weight distribution, your centre of mass and your polar moment, though only by ridiculously small amounts
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Mave

posted on 15/5/06 at 07:24 PM Reply With Quote
Ok, another thing I heard, was that sometimes "a plastic nut" in the steering rack is tightened too much (after it is shortened at MK), taking out too much slack. As a result the rack is more difficult to move, and hence the self centering is hindered. Well, I can't reach this plastic nut without removing my radiator (and I don't want to do that, as it is filled). And besides, I don't even have the proper tool for this nut, because it requires a really large allen-key-shaped tool.

Anyway, I'm told that you should be able to push the arms of the rack in by hand. Is that true? I just tried it by trying to turn the front wheels by hand, but they won't move at all. Is that correct?

Marcel

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JoelP

posted on 15/5/06 at 08:44 PM Reply With Quote
i can turn my front wheels when the car is on the ground, with the full column attached, so it would seem that yours is a little stiff.
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DarrenW

posted on 16/5/06 at 11:13 AM Reply With Quote
This worked for me:
Mushroom hole to front. Neutral camber. Loads of toe out (guessing 3 to 4 degs and yes handling is awful), tyre pressure between 35 and 40 psi.

I cant recommend driving with these settings - i blew the tyres up at the test and let them back down to 18 / reset the toe immedietely after for drive home (at a car park nearby, not in front of the tester).






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