Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Guest INASNT
i have been driving a 205rwkw 33 for a long time and now a 223kw with no real traction problems USING HANCOOK TYRES.

they are shagged and i need new ones and i can still get the power to the ground.

i beleive the susp on my car is not stock and thats probably the difference.

I got blistein suspension, pineapples, and 255 nankang rubber on the back of mine and it still grips rather well with 250rwkw and 300rwkw, but it does bunnyhop sometimes in 2nd and 3rd when trying to get traction.

  • 3 weeks later...
  • Replies 46
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Thank's for the replies guys. I have no idea what pineapples are (quite tasty though), or what camber I have set so I need to take it to someone before I scream. I'm sick of lighting up the rears all time at the lights or on exiting corners.

Anyone have any recomendations for good places in Adelaide??

275/40/17 Nittos, pineapples, -0.4 rear camber (one side has more than the other at the moment - need to go for less) soft shocks and I still have traction issues :) If anyone has a *insert Jap brand name here* LSD to give away I'll gladly take it :)

:) :) :) @ everyone with under 200rwkw complaining of traction problems...

If I could put 280rwkw down in all the gears without wheelspin in my GTS-t, you shouldn't have any problems with 160rwkw ;)

1. Get some decent tyres. What's the point of complaining about lack of traction when you've got $200 tyres on there??? THE TYRES ARE THE ONLY THING BETWEEN YOUR CAR AND THE ROAD!!! They're the ONLY thing putting your power down onto the road.

2. Look at your alignment settings. Even with rock hard coilovers, I was able to put the power down in all gears.

The only times I had traction problems were a) when the tyres "went off" and went all hard... and B) when I went to Eastern Creek and I tried to launch it and gave it too much gas off the line and overcame the tyre vs. track grip, well DUH!!! of course the wheels were going to spin. Your car isn't exempt from the laws of physics :)

I have hardish rear sus (8kg springs, near max damp on ohlins), and no real traction problems at all. I do have a bit over 200rwkw.

Get a good rear alignment, minimal toe (0-0.5mm in), get rid of camber (arms or bushes aim for less than 0.5deg neg if possible). Pineapples, which mount against the rear cradle, and hardmount bushes can be used to change the angle of the rear cradle to optimise traction and reduce tramp.

If this doesnt work, get a mechanical diff.

And, as Merli points out - some half decent tyres.

I've got a 180 with rb20det and hks2530 @14psi, soft suspension, pineapples, fairly decent 225/50/16 tyres and i will break traction above 4500-5000rpm in 2nd, consistently. I'd say i've got a fair bit less weight over the rear wheels compared to r32s and r33s though. Hopefully i'll be able to get a pair of RT215s on another pair of rims to use on particular occasions, but having them as daily tyres just isn't financially viable.

I just got of the floor from laughing so hard.

I'm still coming to term the hideous tyres ppls are strapping onto their high powered cars

when a taxi driver wouldn't even use.

Go and buy some decent tyres before u come to a sudden halt.

When you press the go pedal remove some lead from your right foot, works well for me :rant:

:werd:

i got 265's and my 33 only puts down 140rwkw but with cheap ass tyres (falkens) i could break traction in second easily, rediculous. With the new bridgestone S03's its nearly impossible to break traction in second. So id say tyres would be the first thing to do.

Either my car is way down on power/torque (186rwkw) or I have no idea how to "break traction in 2nd". Even with my old old old shitttty Faulkens (225/50/16) I could not break traction in 2nd gear (wet road was a different story, but even then I had to try - it wouldn't just happen).

I've found that now that my Michelin Preceda's have been worn down quite a bit (80+ laps at Wakefield does that to street tyres) that now instead of "spinning" the rear tyres the back end just breaks out into severe axle tramp. If I drop the clutch then it spins (ie; at the drags in the wet) but if I just put my foot down (ie; accellerate) it just breaks out into axle tramp, wet or dry.

I think I need to replace my "bits n pieces" with that full Whiteline kit :rant:

stay clear of the shitty cheap falkens.. don't be mislead that "all" falkens are good.. they're not, as i found out.

good suspension is a godsend.. but the $$ add up. By the time you sort all that out you would'a spent $4k and there went a lot of other mod ideas on the outright "power" stakes, but its well worth it.

A 180rwkw with good handling will probably beat a 250rwkw bigger turbo car simply because the intelligent guy spent a bit on the handling of the 180rwkw car.

benm: u need to get yours tuned a bit differently.. and run shitty tyres.. it'll spin :D

benm: u need to get yours tuned a bit differently.. and run shitty tyres.. it'll spin :)
I actually just need to get it tuned, but in order to get it tuned I need to get rid of the std ecu and get a PowerFC to give me more torque :) By that time my current ok tyres will become shitty tyres :D

Someone take me for a drive in a car that loses traction in 2nd and 3rd gears, after being in 1 of those I might suddenly become content with only having 186rwkw and not want any more resulting in a better looking bank balance :headspin:

Next time your in Adelaide look me up Ben, I'll take you for a spin :D

I remember ~4yrs ago, back when I had 180rwkw - Dry road, straight line & 1st gear saw the fresh 255 Falkens just starting to spin. After the turbo upgrade WOT in 1st was wheel spin city and WOT in 2nd got the tail a little loose. Now days 1st is just for the drags and cruising away from the lights. 2nd is for doing power slides. I've had a scary moment or two on the drag strip in 3rd - had the back snap out far enough I was headed for the wall! I have that on video somewhere.

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

    • It would be different if the sealant hadn't started to peel up with gaps in the glue about ~6cm and bigger in some areas. I would much prefer not having to do the work take them off the car . However, the filler the owner put in the roof rack mount cavities has shrunk and begun to crack on the rail delete panels. I cant trust that to hold off moisture ingress especially where I live. Not only that but I have faded paint on as well as on either side of these panels, so they would need to come off to give the roofline a proper respray. My goal is to get in there and put a healthy amount of epoxy instead of panel filler/bog and potentially skin with carbon fiber. I have 2 spare rolls from an old motorcycle fairing project from a few years back and I think it'd be a nice touch on a black stag.  I've seen some threads where people replace their roof rack delete with a welded in sheet metal part. But has anyone re-worked the roof rails themselves? It seems like there is a lot of volume there to add in some threads and maybe a keyway for a quick(er) release roof rack system. Not afraid to mill something out if I have to. It would be cool to have a cross bar only setup. That way I can keep the sleek roofline that would accept a couple bolts to gain back that extra utility  3D print some snazzy covers to hide the threaded section to be thorough and keep things covered when not using the rack. 
    • Probably not. A workshop grade scantool is my go to for proper Consult interrogation. Any workshop grade tool should do it. Just go to a workshop.
    • In my head it does make sense to be a fuel problem since that is what I touched when cleaning the system. When I was testing with the fuel pressure gauge, the pressure was constantly 2.5 bar with the FPR vacuum removed. When stalling, the pressure was going up to 3.0 bar (which is how it should be on ignition).
    • ECUtalk pages don't mention they support the ABS computer (consult port has more than one CAN), so you might just need a different scan tool. But, I would expect ABS is a different light to the brake warning/handbrake light, do you see an ABS light come on for a few seconds when you turn the key from ACC to IGN? But since you said: I'd have a look at the ABS sensors in the rear hubs to make sure they are not damaged, disconnected etc.
    • OK, if it idles at 1000+ with the AAC, its not an idle airflow problem. The cold start valve just gives extra air when the engine is cold, but you have enough air without it to idle at 1000. I think you are back to a fuel problem, sorry. Can you see the fuel pressure staying constant or does it drop as the revs drop to a stall?  
×
×
  • Create New...