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-   -   ? About handling.... (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/porsche-911-technical-forum/124911-about-handling.html)

911Brian 08-26-2003 11:03 AM

? About handling....
 
During an autox this past weekend I noticed more understeer than oversteer. I thought these cars were more prone to oversteer? Anyway, I basically had to vary the throttle to get the rear end to come around. Is this normal? I guess I wasn't pushing the car hard enough.

I am running 225's up front and 255's in the rear. Also, I know the allignment is a little off. It appears that the rears have too much positive camber. Not too sure about the fronts.

I kept playing with the tire pressure until it the wear pattern just touched the wear indicator. I had some people in the grid help me on that.

38psi/40psi front/rear

Any ideas?? advice??

Thanks!

BGCarrera32 08-26-2003 11:05 AM

How much gas in the tank?

911Brian 08-26-2003 11:06 AM

hmmm a little less than 1/2.

BGCarrera32 08-26-2003 11:15 AM

Go to a full tank and report back. Before you get ape over suspension changes and the such, play with weight. I'm guessing a gallon of gas weighs...what 10 lbs? So a full 22 gal tank might weigh 220 lbs vs 110 or so? Big diff in weight over the front. If that helps it might give you some clues about what to change.

Disclaimer- never done an auto-x in my 911...I'd just try the easy stuff before tossing money at tires, t-bars, etc.

911Brian 08-26-2003 11:19 AM

Thanks.. I am in not hurry to throw money at it yet. I am still learning to drive my new obsession :D I have just read alot about how these cars are tail happy and I have not really experienced that yet. I do plan on getting a good alignment done sometime in the near future. For now, I just want to become a better driver with what I have, then I will do some susp upgrading.

Jack Olsen 08-26-2003 11:29 AM

To get neutral steering at high speeds, Porsche engineered in understeer at lower speeds. But if you're not tracking the car the same day, there's a lot you can do (with swaybar adjustments and tire pressures) to counter this. You can also counter it with driving technique, using the throttle to induce a little oversteer.

But before you start changing anything, I'd make sure that your baseline setup is where it should be. Make sure the car's alignment settings are consistent all the way around, and that they're set up for the type of driving you want to do.

ChrisBennet 08-26-2003 11:30 AM

911's tend to understeer esp at low speeds. It's only when pushed to the edge or over it, that they oversteer. With every generation they tamed the handling "vices" a little bit more.
-Chris

91C2wrencher 08-26-2003 11:34 AM

911Brian, Try lifting at the turn in point and then report back about oversteer. Don't try this on a public road! More seriously though try a little more air pressure in rears than the fronts, 911 are famous for trailing throtle oversteer maybe try and "plant" the fronts just prior to turn in, turn, then back on the go pedal..easy..the trick to auto crossing is not upseting the car to much. All your transitions should be smmoooth. I usually start an AX with about 3/4 full tank and it is a little tail happy until its down to just under half. A slightly more aggressive alignment and CORNER BALANCE can work wonders for a car on an AX course.

Early_S_Man 08-26-2003 11:47 AM

Brian,

For starters, get an alignment and corner ballance!

For a low-speed course ... more suitible to 1963 Mini-Coopers (or 1972 Honda S-600) ... try lower rear tire pressures, 28 psi - 32 psi, I can guarantee you will feel the difference in a 600 ft slalom of cones!

MuffinMan 08-26-2003 11:57 AM

Jack, what are you running for a suspension?

Wil Ferch 08-26-2003 12:26 PM

This thread often comes up on Rennlist and such.
Jack Olsen and others are correct in what was said so far here.
Another thing....high "g" loads for autocross ( when you crank-in a large amount of steering wheel angle) is an altogether different proposition than the *same* amount of high-g loads at high speed turns, like on a racetrack. There, you'll feed-in lots less steering wheel angle for the same load, and the wheels are more "straight-ahead" than for low speed corners. If you dial-out the understeering characteristics at low speed/high angle corners...the car will be diabolical and tending toward oversteer at high speed/ low steering angle corners. Result: the basic chassis set-up will likely get you low speed understeer. This will get you less understeer ( or even neutral) at high speed corners. Like Jack said, unless you'll go to both types of track on the same day, you *can* dial-out the understeering tendency for low speed...but don't forget to reset before you get back on the highway !!

---Wil Ferch

911Brian 08-26-2003 12:28 PM

Wow! Thanks for the wealth of info guys! I know my alignment is a little out of whack. As far as using the throttle, I was doing that and it helped a bunch. I am still learning, I am a total newbie when it comes to performance driving. And I WILL not try this techniques on public roads! I enjoy staying out of jail and trouble:D

Jack Olsen 08-26-2003 12:31 PM

Quote:

Jack, what are you running for a suspension?
First off, I don't autocross.


But, since you asked:

Suspension and Brake mods
- 9.5x11x17 2-piece Lindsey Racing Fuchs-centered wheels with polished spokes
- 930 Brakes
- Lowered to 24.25 inches front, 24 inches rear
- Front JRZ single-adjustable struts, with 400# coil-over springs
- Front end components designed and modified by Tyson Schmidt and TRE Motorsports, including extended control arms and raised and re-cambered spindles (some of the work also done by JRZ and Fabcar)
- Front upper strut mounts modified for additional caster and entire front end repositioned slightly by TRE Motorsports
- Elephant Racing front Monoballs
- Turbo Tie Rods with ERP drop links to correct bump steer
- Elephant Racing lightweight triangulated strut brace
- Aluminum front crossmember
- Smart Racing front antiswaybar
- Aluminum rear trailing arms, repositioned with with Smart Racing Camber Boxes and monoballs
- Smart Racing 23mm rear antisway bar
- ERP 935-style spring plates
- Rear Bilstein struts with 600# coil-over springs

masraum 08-26-2003 01:34 PM

Jack is running 400/600 lb springs frt/rr and amazingly enough the miata spec suspension kit includes 700/325 lb springs frt/rr and miatas, stock weigh in between 2200 and 2300 lbs and apparently have a 50/50 weight dist.

Early_S_Man 08-26-2003 03:12 PM

Too bad the Miata gives up 800 - 900 lbs to Emma Peel's white '64 or '66 powder blue Lotus Elans ...

CamB 08-26-2003 03:40 PM

That reminds me, I just read a test in a magazine I can't remember (English mag) in which the original Elan (a Sprint coupe 5spd - not soft top) beat more modern equivalents.

They are VERY fragile though, have diabolical electrics and a few items of really suspect design/engineering, and 60k mile engine rebuilds are REQUIRED.

masraum 08-26-2003 03:57 PM

I believe that's the newest EVO that you saw that article in. I bought it the other day. Interesting article. Also of note in the same issue is an article on the Dauer 962, street legal 0-100 7.3 and 250 mph top speed.

masraum 08-26-2003 03:59 PM

Warren, even more importantly the miata is also WITHOUT Emma Peel.

I thought it was interesting that the spec racer springs for the miata were stiffer than the springs Jack is using.

Chuck Moreland 08-26-2003 07:19 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by 911Brian
Thanks.. I am in not hurry to throw money at it yet. I am still learning to drive my new obsession :D I have just read alot about how these cars are tail happy and I have not really experienced that yet. I do plan on getting a good alignment done sometime in the near future. For now, I just want to become a better driver with what I have, then I will do some susp upgrading.
Smart move - keep your money in your pocket. You just need more seat time.

Do get your alignment sorted. That is worth spending money on. Use a reputable specialty shop with experience doing performance alignments on 911s. Get recommendations here. Dont' go to the local tire / wheel shop.

Try to get onto a skid pad with an instructor. You can experience under/oversteer and the impact of throttle with utmost clarity.

Get instructors to ride along and give advice. I have a dollar that says if you brake and feed in throttle at the right time you won't have these problems.

911Brian 08-27-2003 04:37 AM

Thanks Chuck

I plan on attending autox school when it becomes available. Hopefully I can squeeze in an alignment between now and the next autox.


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