Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

The 33 gtr is now rego'd and driving. Its a sweet ride but the tram tracking is very annoying.

I had the 285x30 18's on the gtst and the tracking was noticeable but not annoyingly so.

I fitted these same wheeels/tyres to the gtr and the tram tracking is bloody horrible. It will climb up and follow any small deviation in the road surface. I physically have to fight to keep it in a straight line. On a smooth ride its perfectly fine, I can let the wheel go and the car tracks true.

Is this inherent in the awd with fat tyres or is it possible my wheel alignment needs attention?

Any help appreciated.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/391090-gtr-tram-tracking/
Share on other sites

Isn't that usually a toe issue? More toe and it will change direction very readily, so nice for cornering, but have more of a tendency to tramline. I'm running zero toe at the front but I'm only running 255s, and its a good compromise for me. Do you know what your toe setting is now?

It could be just toe as Mr Stabby says, or it could be that some of the bushes in the front end of the GTR are a bit stuffed and allowing a bit of vagueness. When they're like that, the tyres will grab hold of a groove or feature in the road and that will twist the suspension until the bushes run out of give. If there's enough give to allow the wheel to turn far enough to start steering, then the car will follow. With bushes with less slop, the wheel doesn't get to turn far enough to follow the road feature, and you just feel a tug in the steering wheel rather than the whole car following.

It could be just toe as Mr Stabby says, or it could be that some of the bushes in the front end of the GTR are a bit stuffed and allowing a bit of vagueness. When they're like that, the tyres will grab hold of a groove or feature in the road and that will twist the suspension until the bushes run out of give. If there's enough give to allow the wheel to turn far enough to start steering, then the car will follow. With bushes with less slop, the wheel doesn't get to turn far enough to follow the road feature, and you just feel a tug in the steering wheel rather than the whole car following.

The bushing in general seems to be in good shape.

I am a bit suss of the wheel alignment so I'll start there. Even thought its tracking true on a flat road there may well be toe settings that need attention.

Thanks for your input blokes.

Isn't that usually a toe issue? More toe and it will change direction very readily, so nice for cornering, but have more of a tendency to tramline. I'm running zero toe at the front but I'm only running 255s, and its a good compromise for me. Do you know what your toe setting is now?

I had heaps of toe out in the front on my R34 , cornering was perfect with no tracking at all

the problem is if your GTST had more camber than your GTR then the tyres will have more inside wear and tending to have more load placed on the outside of the tyre ,

which will track heavily on undulating surfaces.

One way to find out is to reverse the front tyres , see what happens , if it continues its your bushings , my guess it will stop tracking !

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • I've looked up the parts number (41011AL501). It's around $700 OEM. Usually our Infiniti G35 here in Canada have interchangeable parts with my Stagea but the parts number are not the same. I have looked around and it seems the JDM 2005 V35 Skyline (which is the same as our G35) has the same caliper but I cannot confirm. And I can't find a repair kit. The inner brake pads drags on the rotor, seems to be rusty piston. Thanks for the info by the way
    • This coupled with 6-9 speed autos with ridiculously short gearing is why these modern shitbox cars always seem so fast off the line. If it wasn't for those things, Raptors would not seem fast. The problem we have is there is a driveability gap between a more gentle take off and a wheelspinning sideways launch. The difference between ankle flex required to achieve one and ankle flex required to achieve the other is about 0.5°.
    • Yeah I think I'm also with the opposite here. It's 'hard to keep up with traffic' because in the real world I'm accelerating with 15% throttle and they are pinning it. It feels like I'm being an overt dickhead at anything above 15% throttle, so the car sounds like I'm being an overt dickhead to keep up with/get ahead of traffic when I'm really just trying to drive with traffic. There would be no issue 'keeping up with traffic' if we used the same level of throttle input/aggression to drive around. People really do just drive around with their foot nearly pinned in econoboxes.
    • To be fair it's the other way around. 300kw is boring in a modern Golf or BMW. They are so competent / well-engineered / devoid of emotion that you have to go stupid fast to feel anything. Whereas the <300kw RB still makes all the right noises and it feels good to drive. Can pull off at the lights with the turbo whooshing and the blow-off pssshing and feel like the coolest kid on the block. Just don't look to the side where you'll see the bored housewifes in their shitbox Yaris/Corolla/Camry that kept up because you didn't go fast at all
    • 300kW is so boring in a Skyline, you'll get spanked by someone's mum's Golf with Alibaba pipes, and an email tune.
×
×
  • Create New...