I have a stock 240sx coupe that suffers form horible understeer is there any tweaking of the factory suspention that I can do to remove it. I have tein tie rods+ends but have yet to install them. In case it matters, I have about 120 pounds of crap in the trunk.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
s13 understeer problem
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by sdtougethats true in physics but not in the real world.
why do you think the mr2 gets so much over steer. just like when you swap a rb25 or somewthing into your 240 youll get more understeer.
sorry. your 100% wrong.
when people refer to mr2s over steer they say the snap oversteer, because when the back end DOES step out, it steps out quickly due to the excessive weight in the back.
whta the hell did you mean its true in physics but not the real world? the real world is physics sucka.
he said the trunk, we arent just talking about general weight here, there is more weight over the REAR wheels, causing them to stick more, and it probably upsets the cars balance a lot.
your argument about swapping an engine and it behaving the same as having a lot of weight in the back isnt even correct for the situation. first off, youre generalizing, and you havent driven every 240 with swaps like that. second, if you swap the engine, you change the weight in the front, though you argue that it does the same as adding weight to the back. youre argument is baseless.
all in all its the driver, just work on your technique and it doesnt matter who you believe about more weight in the back or whatever get the crap out anyways, less weight is generally better.
Comment
-
Originally posted by O5m0515You are 100% WRONG. Tires get more grip when there is weight over them.
Less weight over the rear tires would give that end of the car more grip relative to the weight that they carry, and this results in more understeer (everything else being equal) - plain and simple.
This is not to be mistaken with the fact that less weight over the rear axle will allow the engine to more easily overpower the tires in low-speed maneuvers, but the effect is small and can't be counted on to overcome the increase in lateral grip resulting from small reductions in weight over the rear axle.
My suggestion is to not bother with trying to correct understeer, and spend time to learn entry techniques. Most well set-up drift cars naturally understeer in steady-state cornering, as this provides for a more stable and controllable vehicle while drifting.Last edited by drz; 05-13-2005, 07:42 PM.
Comment
-
I appretiate all help, and I realize none of you know me personaly, so here is what happened: I initiated a 60mph high angle drift in third gear using the feint tecnique and a lot of throttle shortly before a wide 90 degree turn, the car stayed sideways for about one second, then the car started to understeer
itself into the outside curb. my tention rod bushings are shot and my tie rod end bushings are shot.
Comment
-
Originally posted by insaneI appretiate all help, and I realize none of you know me personaly, so here is what happened: I initiated a 60mph high angle drift in third gear using the feint tecnique and a lot of throttle shortly before a wide 90 degree turn, the car stayed sideways for about one second, then the car started to understeer
itself into the outside curb. my tention rod bushings are shot and my tie rod end bushings are shot.
Comment
Comment