Ive been looking around at all my suspension options and notice that nearly every spring company makes springs, for FWD cars, extremely harder in the front than in the back. Ok, so there is added weight in the front to deal with, understand that. buy dont we all know that to reduce understeer the back suspension needs to be nearly as hard as the front......i thought that was grade school shit.[Edited on January 10, 2006 at 1:22 AM. Reason : wasnt paying attention... like it matters]
1/10/2006 12:58:46 AM
youre an idiot.
1/10/2006 1:00:04 AM
enlighten me oh holy one
1/10/2006 1:01:52 AM
^^
1/10/2006 1:04:43 AM
^^^
1/10/2006 1:05:57 AM
fwdbody roll + camber = compromised contact patch + traction loss @ drive wheels and YOU NEED THAT TO CUT THE APEX IN THE TWISTIES MAN[Edited on January 10, 2006 at 1:09 AM. Reason : {/gay ass autox'n college kid}]
1/10/2006 1:09:08 AM
...... i guess you dont know what im getting at here. for example one spec i saw was 4kgf/mm rate in front and like 2.2kgf/mm in the back. Now tell me 4 in the front and 3-3.5 in the back wouldnt handle better. why make the front hard and leave the back soft?[Edited on January 10, 2006 at 1:23 AM. Reason : asd]
1/10/2006 1:20:16 AM
Ok just looked at some true race spec springs used for N1 13kg in the rear and 12kg in the front. explain
1/10/2006 1:35:36 AM
go play gran turismo or something
1/10/2006 1:59:41 AM
if you know suspension more than them, get coilovers, pick your spring rates, set your damping and stfu
1/10/2006 2:51:13 AM
so what he's trying to say is that he knows more about a line of work that he has absolutely no experience in than the people that have done it as a career and make all these cars that people drive work right and that they missed a huge point somewhere in developing suspension for cars and that is why it never works for most cars out there....right? x3
1/10/2006 10:38:41 AM
1/10/2006 10:44:23 AM
1/10/2006 10:51:36 AM
get something RWD and be done with itFWD is gay
1/10/2006 11:14:51 AM
most of you nigger wouldnt know the difference between the two.
1/10/2006 11:58:16 AM
Yo Duke!Does that mean I'm gay?
1/10/2006 12:06:10 PM
Duke won't be able to answer that. He is a big believer in the "don't ask, don't tell policy."
1/10/2006 12:44:19 PM
You guys are retarded. If there is a good reason for springs being made like that, then what the hell is it? You act like you know everything in the world, yet i havent seen one good answer presented. If you are so goddamned smart take some time and explain
1/10/2006 1:26:41 PM
1/10/2006 1:51:38 PM
A spring with a lower spring rate can be "harder" than a spring with a higher spring rate if has less weight on it.
1/10/2006 2:23:27 PM
1/10/2006 2:24:43 PM
^^^^^and^
1/10/2006 2:56:51 PM
^^^there's your answer, right there, although with questionable verbage from an engineering perspective (higher frequency under oscillation...not "harder". )say a car has stock spring rates of 1000 lbs/inch front, and 500 lbs/inch rear. If you outfit it with aftermarket springs with rates 1500 lbs/inch front and 1000 lbs/inch rear, you've of course made it stiffer all around, as well as configured it more towards oversteer (or more likely, less understeer).it's a relative thing. it's not like "stiffer springs in front=understeer, same all around=neutral, stiffer springs in back=oversteer".for that matter, suspension is kind of black magic, anyway. there are a metric shit ton of interrelated variables that go into it, but the above is the simple answer. [Edited on January 10, 2006 at 3:02 PM. Reason : FEAR THE MECHANICAL ENGINEERS]
1/10/2006 3:00:39 PM
Uh oh....time to jump in to the melee here...Duke's right on.Don't forget, too, that required spring rates also have a lot to do with the actual suspension geometry and the spring's relative position in relation to a control arm's geometry and the resulting moments about the control arm's axis of rotation.If the moment arm created at the tire's contact patch is significantly greater than that on which the spring acts, then significantly greater rates are required to maintain equilibrium. For dynamic equilibrium and adquate control, even greater rates may be needed. I'm sure a good deal of research is done on many spring combos, but often the recommended combos are only a starting point, as applications differ greatly, and even setups differ greatly per application. Duke says that this is a black art, and it is in a lot of respects. Not EVERYTHING can be solved IN A TIMELY OR AFFORDABLE MANNER purely by the use of applied mathematics; trial and error is STILL the predominant means of reaching an acceptable goal in most fields of engineering.I'd be willing to bet that somewhere in every spring company's literature they include notes that your results may differ based on your application.All this said, it's true that stiffer rates in the back will induce more oversteer (or help to eliminate excessive understeer)...to an extent. Same goes for stiffer springs up front reducing oversteer. But a LOT more variables exist here, and these are only a starting point.You present an overly simplistic argument that in reality has many more facets than you've brought to the table. We can sit down and discuss this at length if you'd like.
1/10/2006 3:23:40 PM
1/10/2006 4:55:20 PM
1/10/2006 9:02:35 PM
it also has to do with sprung vs. unsprung mass, wheel rates, roll rates, etc. for a comprehensive discussion, see if the library has this book:Race Car Vehicle Dynamicshttp://www.sae.org/servlets/productDetail?PROD_TYP=BOOK&PROD_CD=R-146
1/10/2006 9:15:15 PM
what the fuck sway to the music batman the goblin wont sing your terrible harmonicals dragoning slaying ghooplernickle.down with the king widget hound!
1/11/2006 1:20:46 AM
1/11/2006 1:26:02 AM