Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I'm pretty sure HICAS works by either steering the rear wheels out of phase with the fronts to sharpen turn in response at low speeds, or in phase to reduce understeer at high speeds. They don't turn much, only a couple of degrees, but you can definitely feel the rear end moving around with the HICAS working.

Edited by Big Rizza

Big Rizza is right, it uses a combination of steering wheel angle, speed and lateral force sensors to determine the angle to set the back wheels to.

Aswell as making turning response sharper is also tries to correct oversteer, the best example of this I've seen is the gtr special top gear did. Clarkson had a big drift going and as soon as he went to correct it you could see the rear snap into place, looked cool and great for normal driving but you can see why people use lock bars :D

^^^just to clear up any misunderstandings some people might have...

That would be the Super HICAS off a gtr

HICAS found on gtst's work on the same principle, but only the rear wheels move as opposed to all four with super hicas.

Whered you get that great pic from lbfalcon??

Poombah.. HICAS found on gtst's work on the same principle, but only the rear wheels move as opposed to all four with super hicas.

Think about what you said - of course all 4 move, the front 2 are controlled by you.. the back 2 by HICAS, the main difference is the number of degrees that the rear wheels move - super hicas is up to +/-1 degree I think, vs normal hicas is only +/-0.5degrees

Links.

They can move more than 1 degree.

I think it's more like 1.5 degree normally. The R34 can do a little dance when you reset the hicas, and it moves much more than 2 degrees when it's reseting itself.

hehe the pic was one that I posted of the translation I did of the Super HICAS system which comes in R33 GTSt's. The original image came out of the R33 GTSt sales brochure.

Big Rizza is right, it uses a combination of steering wheel angle, speed and lateral force sensors to determine the angle to set the back wheels to.

Aswell as making turning response sharper is also tries to correct oversteer, the best example of this I've seen is the gtr special top gear did. Clarkson had a big drift going and as soon as he went to correct it you could see the rear snap into place, looked cool and great for normal driving but you can see why people use lock bars :D

I was under the impression that, the particular event where Clarkson had the drift going was at relatively low speed exiting a second gear corner at full throttle. I thought he was demonstrating the ATTESSA system, and he was holding the drift in second gear out of the corner until the front gripped and immediately straightened him up. I have only seen the clip once on T.V ages ago before I even had my learners, that was all I remember.

Poombah.. HICAS found on gtst's work on the same principle, but only the rear wheels move as opposed to all four with super hicas.

Think about what you said - of course all 4 move, the front 2 are controlled by you.. the back 2 by HICAS, the main difference is the number of degrees that the rear wheels move - super hicas is up to +/-1 degree I think, vs normal hicas is only +/-0.5degrees

My bad. Should've elaborated more...

I know what you said but what I meant with 'same principle' is that they both steer wheels to adjust the car :(

hehe the pic was one that I posted of the translation I did of the Super HICAS system which comes in R33 GTSt's. The original image came out of the R33 GTSt sales brochure.

So you're saying T's came with S-hicas also? If so, then I should've looked a little harder when buying my car :(

If you think of a Skyline as what its supposed to be... ie a sporty passenger car, then HICAS is awesome. If you take a corner too fast it kicks in and helps you keep the car in control and back on line.

If you're a fully sick drifter or die hard trackday warrior, then HICAS is like going on a date with a hot chick and having your mom run upto your car to give you a scarf so you don't catch a cold... ie... nice thought, but totally useless. You want to control your car one way, and HICAS wants to help so it makes your car go the other way.

ATTESA stands for "Advanced Total Traction Engineering System for All Electronic Torque Split" = torque distribution

HICAS stands for "High Capacity Active Steering" = steering

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

    • Thanks for the linkie. Certainly always a great deal of help when people post comparisons like these, but I think for now I'll stay away from any semi slicks. I did go ahead and order the sportcontact 7. My buddy has them on his modified A4 and he keeps saying how good they are. For my intended purposes these will probably work real well. I'll report on them once I had the chance to try them out
    • Talk about noisy. Even when I still had the Tomei under the car I could distinctly hear the tires rolling. And I doubt I ever will need maximum grip like on a track. My GTR will maybe never even see the 600hp mark and I need to get used to the car quite a bit before challenging the limits of its handling. For the next winter storage I think I will get a set of these rubber drive-on thingies that have a tire shaped base. Those supposedly really help prevent flat spots.
    • Well our climate is definitely way less hot overall and the weather can be quite picky at times. I just know that during normal road use or even spirited drives there is no way I'd be able to consistently stay in the operating temperature, and constantly changing the tire pressure would also be a royal pain.
    • Input shaft bearing. They all do it. There is always rollover noise in Nissan boxes - particularly the big box. Don't worry about it unless it gets really growly.
    • For once a good news  It needed to be adjusted by that one nut and it is ok  At least something was easy But thank you very much for help. But a small issue is now(gearbox) that when the car is stationary you can hear "clinking" from gearbox so some of the bearing is 100% not that happy... It goes away once you push clutch so it is 100% gearbox. Just if you know...what that bearing could be? It sounding like "spun bearing" but it is louder.
×
×
  • Create New...