Is there a "formula" for spring rate F/R for best Handling?
#1986672
01/09/16 12:11 AM
01/09/16 12:11 AM
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Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 1,235 Phoenix, AZ
Jjs72D
OP
Deep in the closet
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OP
Deep in the closet
Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 1,235
Phoenix, AZ
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I have wondered about this for awhile and thought I'd ask around. I see that some people like to buy a pre-packaged kit like the TVS from Hotchkis or PST or something similar, but I'm still curious about it. When a person sets out to improve the handling of their car, their personal tastes will differ from the next guy. I'm interested in knowing how these engineers arrive at the specific parts that become part of the kit. For example, with engines, we expect the exhaust valve to be smaller than the intake valve because it always is. In the case of suspensions, the front roll stiffness or spring rate is always higher than the rear. I mean in terms of our front engine/rear drive cars. I guess I am asking, is there a percentage of roll stiffness that they use to determine what to use? If the front is say...a *100, is the rear a *75? More at the rear causes oversteer, less will result in understeer? Another hypothetical: 3500 lb 72 Duster with all iron 360, battery in trunk. .92 Torsion bars 1.250 front sway bar KYB shocks. Stock leafs with 1 additional leaf, .75 rear bar, KYB shocks. I haven't been able to drive the car on the street yet for many reasons but I am just interested in the science of all of it. I don't want to just do what others did, I want to learn the math of it. Do people start off setting the car to lean/roll as little as possible while giving a decent ride, then fine tune the chassis with small changes? I am interested in whatever anyone can spill on the subject. Thanks, Jeff
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Re: Is there a "formula" for spring rate F/R for best Handling?
[Re: Jjs72D]
#1986709
01/09/16 01:07 AM
01/09/16 01:07 AM
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Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 679 Los Osos, Ca
CKessel
mopar
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mopar
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 679
Los Osos, Ca
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I own the car on the cover of the Ultimate Super Street Mopar. And that is a very good resource for information. Andy F's book in another and if you can find them, the old Direct Connection Circle/Oval track books have lots of stuff too. The Mopar Performance versions of those books are watered down and missing a lot of the information you are after.
Carl Kessel
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Re: Is there a "formula" for spring rate F/R for best Handling?
[Re: Jjs72D]
#1986758
01/09/16 02:52 AM
01/09/16 02:52 AM
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Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 14,889 up yours
Supercuda
About to go away
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About to go away
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 14,889
up yours
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Sorry Andy, forgot about your book
They say there are no such thing as a stupid question. They say there is always the exception that proves the rule. Don't be the exception.
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Re: Is there a "formula" for spring rate F/R for best Handling?
[Re: Jjs72D]
#1986870
01/09/16 12:17 PM
01/09/16 12:17 PM
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Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 23,532 Here
jcc
If you can't dazzle em with diamonds..
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If you can't dazzle em with diamonds..
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 23,532
Here
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I agree, some time library time would be in order. I have read a plethora of books including those already mentioned. My takeaway, for the non engineer, the best book, bar none is: http://www.amazon.com/Think-Fast-Racers-Why-To-Winning-ebook/dp/B00IJ2MB0IOne common thread thru out the book, which many newbies seem to ignore is, because they are looking for the holy grail, is, "everything effects everything else". You can't get around that as your set-up becomes more sorted out.
"When one’s appeal is emotional, it does not matter if there is no substance."
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Re: Is there a "formula" for spring rate F/R for best Handling?
[Re: Jjs72D]
#1986899
01/09/16 01:25 PM
01/09/16 01:25 PM
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 5,406 Pikes Peak Country
TC@HP2
master
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master
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 5,406
Pikes Peak Country
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Andy's book gives an easy and simple answer for it all. Another easy answer is simply set your car up to fall on the neutral handling line as shown below from the Mike Martin book, Mopar Suspensions. Of course, getting front weight percentage is easy. Its all the calculations that go into figuring out roll couple front and rear that make it tricky. Martin's book gives info on how to do this, as do the other books listed above and the Mopar Chassis and Oval Track books also have info on it. Where it gets tricky is you can't just plug in rates. You have to find motion ratios of the sway bars front and rear and rear springs. T-bars are 1:1, so that part is easy. Once you have all this, then yes, its possible to set up a formula that show you where your car falls and then you can target the percentages on the chart above. I created one for my Challenger so I can see what changes may do to it, but I also have a configuration on my car that is different than stock using many non stock components, so it doesn't easily translate to other vehicles. I also set my calculator up to back into required leaf spring rates as these are the easiest part to customize. There are only so many t-bar and sway bar pieces out there, so we are limited on how wide a range of front end set ups we can get, whereas leaf spring can more readily be modified to match the front system.
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Re: Is there a "formula" for spring rate F/R for best Handling?
[Re: Jjs72D]
#1986913
01/09/16 01:57 PM
01/09/16 01:57 PM
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Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 14,889 up yours
Supercuda
About to go away
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About to go away
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 14,889
up yours
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The theoretical handling line is fine, for a starting point. But each driver has his idiosyncrasies which will make every setup a bit different even on otherwise identical examples.
They say there are no such thing as a stupid question. They say there is always the exception that proves the rule. Don't be the exception.
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Re: Is there a "formula" for spring rate F/R for best Handling?
[Re: TC@HP2]
#1986999
01/09/16 04:32 PM
01/09/16 04:32 PM
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Joined: May 2005
Posts: 723 Houston Tx
Uhcoog1
super stock
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super stock
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 723
Houston Tx
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Andy's book gives an easy and simple answer for it all. Another easy answer is simply set your car up to fall on the neutral handling line as shown below from the Mike Martin book, Mopar Suspensions. Of course, getting front weight percentage is easy. Its all the calculations that go into figuring out roll couple front and rear that make it tricky. Martin's book gives info on how to do this, as do the other books listed above and the Mopar Chassis and Oval Track books also have info on it. Where it gets tricky is you can't just plug in rates. You have to find motion ratios of the sway bars front and rear and rear springs. T-bars are 1:1, so that part is easy. Once you have all this, then yes, its possible to set up a formula that show you where your car falls and then you can target the percentages on the chart above. I created one for my Challenger so I can see what changes may do to it, but I also have a configuration on my car that is different than stock using many non stock components, so it doesn't easily translate to other vehicles. I also set my calculator up to back into required leaf spring rates as these are the easiest part to customize. There are only so many t-bar and sway bar pieces out there, so we are limited on how wide a range of front end set ups we can get, whereas leaf spring can more readily be modified to match the front system. This
-'02 Dodge Viper Ex-World Challenge racecar -'73 Duster, 6.1 based 392 hilborn hemi, tko600, full floater rear 9", Hellwig custom bars, viper brakes, built for road course
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Re: Is there a "formula" for spring rate F/R for best Handling?
[Re: Jjs72D]
#1987024
01/09/16 05:19 PM
01/09/16 05:19 PM
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 31,259 Oregon
AndyF
I Win
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I Win
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 31,259
Oregon
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The way engineers think about it is controlling the tire patch. The tires with the heaviest load are more likely to be overloaded than the tires with less load. On a nose heavy car the front tires take more load than rear tires. You can fix that by putting bigger tires up front but almost nobody does that since it looks weird.
The whole problem of handling for a nose heavy car then revolves around the question of how do you keep the front tires from being overloaded.
Some Mopar guys don't even like the 11.75 brake swap since it widens the front track width. But widening the front track width is exactly the right thing to do when you have a nose heavy car. If you aren't going to widen the front track width, and you aren't going to run big tires up front then you basically have a pretty car that isn't going to corner. The only other option is to spend a ton of money and turn your nose heavy Mopar into a lightweight race car with 50/50 weight distribution.
If you can achieve something close to 50/50 then your options open up. If you can move a little more weight to the rear and have a 55/45 car then you can have a pretty car that does corner. It might look like a 911 but it will have bigs and littles and will transfer weight to the rear on take off and maintain good weight distribution under heavy braking. Basically the perfect setup which is why the 911 has been killing it on the racetrack for many, many years.
Last edited by AndyF; 01/09/16 05:23 PM.
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Re: Is there a "formula" for spring rate F/R for best Handling?
[Re: AndyF]
#1987228
01/09/16 10:19 PM
01/09/16 10:19 PM
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Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 23,532 Here
jcc
If you can't dazzle em with diamonds..
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If you can't dazzle em with diamonds..
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 23,532
Here
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Is that graph posted earlier copied out of your copyrighted book, without your express written permission, and if you don't take prudent action to prevent this type of ,violation you risk it becoming public domain, and you know all this as lawyer, if I am correct? I know you are nice guy, but fair is fair. If there is an exception, I'd like to know it, because there plenty of stuff I'd like to put up.
"When one’s appeal is emotional, it does not matter if there is no substance."
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Re: Is there a "formula" for spring rate F/R for best Handling?
[Re: BigBlockMopar]
#1987268
01/09/16 11:34 PM
01/09/16 11:34 PM
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Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 23,532 Here
jcc
If you can't dazzle em with diamonds..
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If you can't dazzle em with diamonds..
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 23,532
Here
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Thank you for clearing that up, thought it was posted originally without author notation, but the copyright issue still exists.
"When one’s appeal is emotional, it does not matter if there is no substance."
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Re: Is there a "formula" for spring rate F/R for best Handling?
[Re: Jjs72D]
#1987465
01/10/16 11:23 AM
01/10/16 11:23 AM
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Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 14,889 up yours
Supercuda
About to go away
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About to go away
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 14,889
up yours
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Get a grip JCC
Look up fair use exception
[censored] eyeroll
They say there are no such thing as a stupid question. They say there is always the exception that proves the rule. Don't be the exception.
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Re: Is there a "formula" for spring rate F/R for best Handling?
[Re: Supercuda]
#1987563
01/10/16 01:41 PM
01/10/16 01:41 PM
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Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 23,532 Here
jcc
If you can't dazzle em with diamonds..
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If you can't dazzle em with diamonds..
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 23,532
Here
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Get a grip JCC
Look up fair use exception
[censored] eyeroll Doesn't apply here, IMO, maybe it grips yours.
"When one’s appeal is emotional, it does not matter if there is no substance."
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