Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

S13, but that shouldn't matter.

See video and not that in the long left hander at 0:41 and 1:43 how the nose of the car seems to want dart around a bit. All throughout the video you can see how skittish the car is. Last time I drove here it was much more progressive, I've added swaybars since then and I'm guessing the whole setup is too firm now.

And this is before the bars went in and starting from turn 1.

Here's what's in it/the alignment, let me know what you think. I did the alignment with a stringline, took 6hrs going up and down allowing the car to be settled again then re-measuring. I had no success with local shops.

So after A LOT of stuffing around it now has the following and "looks" a lot better.

Front - Camber/Toe (can't tell you what castor is, arms are stock). Considered maybe less camber might give me a better contact patch if the car is now not leaning over as much with the swaybars.
Driver: -2.75/1mm toe out
Pass: -2.75/1mm toe out

Rear- Camber/Toe
Driver: - 1.3/1mm toe in
Pass: -1.3/1mm toe in

Car has BC BR Coilovers with 8kg Front and 6kg rear springs - maybe these are too firm?

Whiteline 27mm front swaybar (adjustable and on max soft)

R32 GT-R rear swaybar (25mm hollow)
New end links both ends.

Federal RS-Rs 235 all round, was running about 29-30psi hot on that day. Maybe I'm just at the limit of what these tyres can do?

I'm yet to get under it and have a look at how the tyres wore, but the car was a late more skatey than usual, not sure if that's because the swaybars are allowing me to go faster or because something is wrong.

Yes I realise I am also a shit driver and smoother inputs will help :)

Did you use the same spring damper before and after ?

I would have thought before putting sways in the coilovers were taking alot of the load to stop body roll hence you having to run a harder setting on the coilovers?

Now you have decent sways the coilovers dont need to run double duty as such and take the anti roll job as much hence if using the damper rate as before your now too stiff....you should be able to soften the damper rate off to allow each part to do its job now

  • Like 1

I'm thinking a couple of things.

1) Like you and bcozican, I ponder if the overall suspension rate is too high. If your coilovers have very stiff springs and you have added stiff ARBs, then you will possibly have too much roll rate.

If you have wound the damping on the coilovers back to full soft (or even at the soft end) then it is very possible that you simply have too much spring (spring and ARB) rate for too little damping. As your very first order of business I would suggest that you look to winding the dampers up to half way, or perhaps stiffer and try again. The reason I say this is that if you are underdamped on stiff spring rates, then it will certainly skip around and be skittish. There isn't enough damping for the spring rate.

2) It is just possible that the ARBs that you have added have unbalanced your previous setup. Assuming it had good front-rear balance before, putting semi-random ARBs on top of that setup might have stiffened the front a lot more than it stiffened the rear. If that has happened, then it will want to understeer more. It certainly looked and sounded like it was understeering more in the long left hander. Admittedly, that will also happen if the damping isn't right, per my first thought above.

If your ARBs are adjustable, you could try softening the front one as much as you can. That will shift the grip balance forward a bit. Be aware though that if the real problem is unsufficient damping, then it could end up feeling better anyway, simply because you have backed off on the total roll rate at the front. Also be aware that if the problem is not in the balance, if it is instead simply too much spring rate for the damping, then softening the front without softening the back may well make the skippy behaviour worse at the rear.

^^ all that :yes:

also if all that is done and still a little unbalanced would it be a case of if you are now cornering harder and faster that front camber specifically (and may rear) might have to be increased a little bit also so that your not rolling over on the tyre? and increase turn in

Spoke to BC who suggested I speak with Paul at option1, he recommended returning to the stock front swaybar and testing that, leaving spring rates alone. Then swapping that around and putting the stock rear back in but leaving the front.

That's a fir bit of f**king around at a paid track day but it's not impossible.

I might take both bars, go and run a session with it as it is, and see how those times compare to previous Winton times then look to swap a bar out and test again.

Federal said my hot tyre pressures are fine.

Paul also said my alignment settings were on the money.

I put it on stands last night after packing up all my gear from the track day.

Interestingly the outside edge of the tyres front and rear looks darker/more worn.

Which I thought would imply it needs more camber.

Talking to a buddy of mine with a very similarly setup car (but better and wider tyres) he runs -3.5 front and -2.5 rear with the same bars and spring rates (although Tien RS and no BCs).

Two other things.

I'm being advised to get some adjustable castor arms and dial in more positive castor and was also asked to look at the angle of my LCAs, which are definitely not parallel upfront. Cross member side sits lower than wheel side which as I understand it is not good for Roll Centre,

Essentially, yes. It's about the arc that the arms swing through and the induced camber changes etc etc blah blah. If the arm is horizontal then the wheel is at the widest point of the circle/arc when at rest/zero position. Any disturbance up/down changes the relationship of the wheel to the road and the car less when set up this way than when the wheel is up above that diameter line. Know what I mean? Different suspension designs suffer to varying degrees. Skylines hate being too low. Silvias, with struts at the front, probably aren't as bad.

Then you start to get into more serious questions about where the roll centre is located. Perhaps you should google up the question and look at what happens when the roll centre is too low. There are some great books you can buy that will open your eyes a lot if you're interested enough. I recommend this one http://www.amazon.com/Race-Car-Vehicle-Dynamics-Experiments/dp/0768011272

If I raise it, I'm going to lose some neg camber also, so may also need camber bolts - but then strut clearance starts to become an issue.

A few people are jumping up and down about how I am still running stock caster arms also - which should give me more neg (dynamic) camber if I understand it correctly.

A few people are jumping up and down about how I am still running stock caster arms also - which should give me more neg (dynamic) camber if I understand it correctly.

Yes. Correct. And for a track car especially, the free dynamic camber you gain is worth a lot.

OK so raise the ride height, and get some castor arms.

I also have ties to the local BMW dealership who are happy to run over the car on their laser aligner for mates rates.

Any indication of what ride height should be in the rear? Front seems to be, get arms parallel, what about the rear?

OH I may also grab some camber bolts.

Edited by ActionDan

I wouldn't go more camber at the rear unless you want less drive traction. As to height, again the lower arms want to be close to parallel. If it was a Skyline you could look up the recommended eyebrow heights and use that as a guide. Silvias might be different measurement for the same actual height though.

If you lift the front, and the back then looks low......then lift the back too!

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 got back to Japan in January and was keen to get back on track as quickly as possible. Europe is god-awful for track accessibility (by comparison), so I picked up a first-gen GT86 in December just to have something I could jump into right away. The Skyline came over in a container this time and landed in early January. It was a bit battered after Europe, though—I refused to do anything beyond essential upkeep while it was over there. The clutch master cylinder gave out, and so did the power steering. I didn’t even bother changing the oil; it was the same stuff that went in just before I left Japan the first time. Naughty. Power steering parts would’ve cost double with shipping and taxes, so knowing I’d be heading back to Japan, I just postponed it and powered through the arm workout. It took a solid three months to get the car back on the road. Registration was a nightmare this time around. There were a bunch of BS fees to navigate, and sourcing parts was a headache. I needed stock seats for shaken, mistakenly blew 34k JPY on some ENR34 seats—which, of course, didn’t fit—then ended up having the car’s technical sheet amended to register it as a two-seater with the Brides. Then there’s the GT86. Amazing car. Does everything I want it to do. Parts are cheap, easy to find, and I don’t care what anyone says—it’s super rewarding to drive. I’ve done a few basic mods: diff ratio, coilovers, discs, pads, seat, etc. It already had a new exhaust manifold and the 180kph limiter removed, so I assume it’s running some kind of map. I’ve just been thrashing it at the track non-stop—mostly Fuji Speedway now, since I need something with higher speed after all that autobahn time. The wheels on the R34 always pissed me off—too big, and it was a nightmare getting tires to fit properly under the arches. So I threw in the towel and bought something that fits better. Looks way cleaner too (at least to me)—less hotboy, less attention-seeking. Still an R34, though. Now for future plans. There are a few things still outstanding with the car. First up, the rear subframe needs an overhaul—that’s priority one. Next, I need to figure out an engine rebuild plan. No timeline yet, but I want to keep it economical—not cutting corners, just not throwing tens of thousands at a mechanic I can barely communicate with. And finally, paint. Plus a bit of tidying up here and there.  
    • Nope, needed to clearance under the bar a little with a heat gun, a 1/2" extension as the "clearancer", and big hammer, I was aware of this from the onset, they fit a 2.0 with this intake no problems, but, the 2.5 is around 15mm taller than a 2.0, so "clearancing" was required  It "just" touched when test fitting, now, I have about 10mm of clearance  You cannot see where it was done, and so far, there's no contact when giving it the beans Happy days
    • It's been a while since I've updated this thread. The last year (and some) has been very hectic. In the second-half of 2024 I took the R34 on a trip through Germany, Italy, France and Switzerland - it was f*cking great. I got a little annoyed with the attention the car was getting around Europe and really didn't drive it that much. I could barely work on the car since I was living in an inner-city apartment (with underground parking). During the trip, the car lost power steering in France - split hose - and I ended up driving around 4,000kms with no power steering.  There were a few Nurburgring trips here and there, but in total the R34 amassed just shy of 7,000kms on European roads. Long story short, I broke up with the reason I was transferred to Europe for and requested to be moved back to Japan. The E90, loved it. It was a sunk cost of around EUR 10,000 and I sold it to a friend for EUR 1,500 just to get rid of it quickly. Trust me, moving countries f*cking sucks and I could not be bothered to be as methodical as I was the first time around.
    • I assume clearances were all a-okay?
    • Shock tower brace is in +5Kw....LOL  
×
×
  • Create New...