Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Are the rubber mounts an option for road going cars or is there a reason I'd choose those over the spherical unit for a track car?



http://www.hard-race.com.au/index.php?route=product/product&path=25_29_355&product_id=418



VS



http://www.isccoilovers.com.au/nissan-castor-arms



Spherical work a bazzillion times better. Not really legal on the road, so sticklers for legality* would avoid them. For a track car, there is no argument for not using spherical.

*I'm a stickler for legality in most respects, but I used spherical bearing caster arms on my road car because of how much better they are, coupled with the unlikelihood of them even being noticed in a roadside pullover situation.

Only thing about spherical joints (apart from cheapo ones sometimes flogging out very quickly in certain applications) is that they generally aren't allowed in IPRA - if you decide to head in that direction. If it's just a track toy / WTAC toy then go your hardest.

The beauty of spherical joints is that they let the suspension move the way it was intended, so under load your geometry remains where it's supposed to be.

Thanks, not an issue for me thankfully.

I had someone tell me that ISC are junk, thoughts?

I have ISC rear camber arms and they "seem" fine.

The car doesn't do a lot of K's each year.

I didn't really wanna pay $200 for caster arms.

Choose wisely mate,,, I have seen factory radius rods break over time and wis-bang spherical ones snap as well.

Whilst the Spherical ones are more direct they have no give whatsoever,,,sooner or later they will fail.

Lifeing both would be the idea,,but the question if for how long.

Cheers

Neil.

Lifeing both?

Scheduled replacement interval. Work out how long you expect it to last, then replace them at an appropriate time (preferably before they fail). unfortunately, you need some failure history to be able to work out an appropriate life.

It is possible to crack test the items that are likely to snap (I have an MPI crack tester) and you can inspect the spherical bearings for wear. The latter is an easy check you can do, but unless you have access to the right people / equipment, crack testing becomes dearer than outright replacement.

Edited by warps

Ahh, my car is lucky to cover a few thousand ks a year - track ks granted, but still.

I assume inspecting the spherical bearing is as simple as giving it a yank and seeing what freeplay there is?

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

    • Sorry to hear your HFM BM57 was faulty,  did you contact HFM I would hope they would be at least grateful for the information if there was some sort of manufacturing fault, you would hope they would be sympathetic even if your item was 2 years old if it had never been fitted. May I ask where it leaked from ?
    • Cats are called Bella, and Donna...  Like that poisonous plant And I remember your 2 monsters, I remember making a little bit of wee when you let them out... LOL I have already installed cat doors into the laundry where their kitty litter is, and the sun room, apart from the cat doors there's not going to be any permanent mounted stuff on the interior walls (interior doors are cheap and easy to replace) I will get a outdoor cat cage thingie once I finish the landscaping out back... https://catnip.com.au/ The only off limit areas are the main bedroom and the gym room....but, currently the cats are curled up in bed, in the main bedroom with the Mrs.....LOL, the off limits for the kittens to the main bedroom lasted about 5 minutes with Jackie I currently only have 1 free standing huge cat tree multiple level scratching post thingie in the lounge room, but, I will be getting another one soon now that I'm happy with the furniture layout in the back room and have a perfect spot for it  
    • All of this is making it seem clear that running the Coppermix twin was definitely the way to go, especially in hindsight with how insane tariffs have gotten and the strength of the USD vs yen at the time.
    • That sounds like no chance of even importing one for road registering then Now I see why Duncan wants to check LHD rules for Targa...   I wonder how "bolt in" the AWD would be if you got one imported from the US and swapped it to an AUD one
    • Not to mention they drive like a bucket of bolts! yuck!
×
×
  • Create New...