Does having your ride height set too low really hinder your handeling? I heard going too low can make your cars handeling worse, but i dont see why. As long as the car dosnt bottom out you should be fine.
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Ride height to low hinder you handeling?
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A car that is heavily lowered needs to have its suspension geometry modified to account for the lowering: some type of roll center spacers for the control arms and steering arms, raising the subframe, etc.
The lower the car, the stiffer the suspension should be. And not all tracks are friendly with extra stiff suspension. You don't want your car to bounce on bumps.
BTW we are talking track stuff, right?Brake harder. Go faster. No shit.
massivebrakes.com
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Massiv...78417442267056
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It's because of the crap front suspension geometry. Go too low and the car will actually want to roll more in a turn.2006 GMC Sierra 2500HD 4WD LBZ/Allison
2002 BMW M3 Alpinweiß/Black
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Read this: http://www.e30m3project.com/e30m3per...t_transfer.htm
Then, read the rest of the site. You will be 5x smarter than r3v after.
NASA MidSouth TT Director / GTS2 #018
Mods: Coastal PS Fluid, 10w40 Oil
Future Mods: Bosch Micro-Edge Wiper Blades, Painter's Tape, Spark Plugs, Freezer for Nutty Buddys, Adam Nitti CD's
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Originally posted by Massive Lee View PostA car that is heavily lowered needs to have its suspension geometry modified to account for the lowering: some type of roll center spacers for the control arms and steering arms, raising the subframe, etc.
The lower the car, the stiffer the suspension should be. And not all tracks are friendly with extra stiff suspension. You don't want your car to bounce on bumps.
BTW we are talking track stuff, right?
Originally posted by nrubenstein View PostIt's because of the crap front suspension geometry. Go too low and the car will actually want to roll more in a turn.
Originally posted by Skafrog View PostRead this: http://www.e30m3project.com/e30m3per...t_transfer.htm
Then, read the rest of the site. You will be 5x smarter than r3v after.
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Originally posted by JMil86 View PostJust heat up your springs til they are red hot and then compress them with spring compressors, then cut off half of the coils. Dont bother with buying anything, or shocks or anything like that. This is the only way to do it.
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Originally posted by JMil86 View PostJust heat up your springs til they are red hot and then compress them with spring compressors, then cut off half of the coils. Dont bother with buying anything, or shocks or anything like that. This is the only way to do it.Brake harder. Go faster. No shit.
massivebrakes.com
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Massiv...78417442267056
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Originally posted by 87e30 View PostSo that begs the question.... what is too low? what is too stiff?
It all depends on variables. How far are you prepared to modify your suspension/chassis, do your class rules allow for it, what is the car used for.
On stock geometry it is a function of both height and spring rate. Go only as low as it takes to get the control arms roughly level with the ground. Then you don't really want them to go past that so theoretically if you are going to have any travel you would still want a small angle / \ on your arms.
Making sense?
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In terms of pure grip, the point at which your strut axis is perpendicular to the control arm is the crossover in the camber curve derivative--the point at which your dynamic camber is maxed out, and you will begin to lose negative camber on compression instead of gain it. Generally you'll want to set the ride height a good margin north of that point.
But "handling" is not quite as simple as camber curves, you also have to take into account the tie rod geometry, bump steer (and toe steer especially) is never fun. Strut travel, etc are also obviously equally as important.paint sucks
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Originally posted by theox69 View PostSway bars are your friend, in terms of body roll.
The downside to sway bars they don't allow the wheels to act independently.
The downside to using springs is that it can make the car over sprung and jumpy on a not so smooth track.
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