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-   -   Modifications vs Lap Times (http://www.the370z.com/nissan-370z-general-discussions/96263-modifications-vs-lap-times.html)

osbornsm 09-16-2014 02:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JWillis72 (Post 2966846)
The Hotchkis sway bars helped my cars cornering a lot.

Perhaps you can be more specific ??

JWillis72 09-16-2014 03:32 PM

I can't give you time because I have changed more than one thing between track days and I'm still improving as a driver but before the sway bars the car had a lot of body roll in the hard turns and pushed in the turns. The sway bars got rid of that and the car rids much flatter. I just went to 10" wide tires and softer tire that I'm looking forward to seeing what they can do in 2 weeks.


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JWillis72 09-16-2014 03:34 PM

You never answered my question, does your car have a factory LSD? If it doesn't I would do that first, in my opinion the car is dangerous to track without one.

jaedub 09-16-2014 04:13 PM

In my personal view, the most effective way to cut your lap time is to make your car lighter. Especially the unsprung weight. Other than that, I think LSD and suspension set up is far beneficial than other mods.

Duc_Z09 09-16-2014 04:39 PM

Brakes upgrades will help if you don't already have the sport package. You'll be able to use them later when approaching turns.

BGTV8 09-16-2014 05:24 PM

So the theory goes like this:

1. Tune the driver - when you cannot go any faster with an OEM setup, move to step 2, but to start, you only need the usual safety and reliability stuff: must have an oil cooler, pads and brake fluids - if you don;t have the sport model - purchase some Akebono's - they are good enough until you get really serious
2. Bars first, our cars need a BIG front bar, leave the rear bar alone, replacement front bar needs some adjust-ability, with stickier tyres - if going r-specs at this stage, you also require 2nd set of wheels and a small trailer to tow it all, so fit one of the hitches off the forum as well. Time to add a decent diff at this stage, I have a KAAZ 2-way with 4.08:1 gears as well as 3.7:1 with a Quaife. The KAAZ is brutal, the Quaife is softer, but there is a time and place for each - it is circuit dependent. I use the KAAZ for those circuits that are stop/go and the Quaife for circuits with a more flowing nature. Since I do not know US circuits, I can't offer any opinion.
3. Next is suspension - shocks and springs - the best you can get for your budget, could be as simple as BC ER thru KW V3 all the way up to JRZ or Ohlins gold-plated goodness. Chuck the OEM suspension bushes and replace with SPL kit, front upper control arms and lower control arm bushes are a must to get the best out of sticky tyres and a rear upright bushing kit is also mandatory - OEM bushes turn to sludge at the first sign of a real workout and that makes the car "sloppy" when you need it taut. At this stage you also need the yaw sensor fix so you can trail-brake at will - not fixing the yaw sensor will destroy your enjoyment of the car. If you are here and do not have a diff in the car, you need to add it now, and you will require r-spec tyres to maximise the mechanical grip available with a stiffer suspension
4. Then fit a race seat and 5 or 6 point harness
5. Now you add power, and go all out to reduce weight - the usual stuff is to remove passenger seat but you can go all out and completely strip the car, but it will affect resale values no matter how careful you are. If staying NA, LTH and a good free-flowing system plus CAI and a tune (maybe clean up the lower inlet manifold as well). If going FI, you need to max out the rear rubber and you will need to think seriously about front track to maintain some sort of handling balance. I have an NA setup with 9.5 x 18 on 265/35R18 or 275/35R18 tyres at ET20 on the front and ET12 on the rear and find this to be well balanced

I reckon on around 1 sec of lap time for each additional 50-70 hp atw, so going from 300 to 500 hp will give you 3-4 seconds of lap time, but it could be the most expensive lap time reduction because it could well cost you an engine - so beware FI and TT especially as it puts a lot of heat low-down into the engine bay. SC is a little better in that it only generates combustion heat, but the difference is marginal.

This is a lot about personal opinion but I have done this a half-dozen times and this approach has worked for me, so it might work for you as well.

JWillis72 09-16-2014 05:54 PM

I didn't follow that path since since I had a supercharger delivered the day I went to my first track day but I think that a great plan for a track car! It was much harder to work on my throttle control after adding power.

BGTV8 09-17-2014 01:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JWillis72 (Post 2967092)
I didn't follow that path since since I had a supercharger delivered the day I went to my first track day but I think that a great plan for a track car! It was much harder to work on my throttle control after adding power.

Exactly why it is easier to tune-the-driver with more modest power levels, as too much power can cause driving habit issues.

That said, each journey is unique - the main thing is to enjoy the hobby.

0101 09-17-2014 06:56 AM

2 problems with doing racing tires before other mods.
1 - They wear out
2 - They mask driver mistakes, so you don't learn.

I would rather do tires as the last mod, that way all the other mods you can enjoy year round for the life of the car.

Mike 09-17-2014 08:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 0101 (Post 2967488)
2 problems with doing racing tires before other mods.
1 - They wear out
2 - They mask driver mistakes, so you don't learn.

I would rather do tires as the last mod, that way all the other mods you can enjoy year round for the life of the car.

true, but he wants lower lap times, and racing tires are the best bang for the buck mod for achieving that goal.

osbornsm 09-18-2014 08:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mike (Post 2967568)
true, but he wants lower lap times, and racing tires are the best bang for the buck mod for achieving that goal.

THANK you for paying attention Mike

:werd:

i currently have the tire on lockdown ($$ issue)
I'm not sure upgraded sways would make a difference worth $500 ?

JWillis72 09-18-2014 09:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by osbornsm (Post 2969050)
)
I'm not sure upgraded sways would make a difference worth $500 ?

amazon has them for under $400

damian_mb 09-18-2014 10:03 AM

Want to improve lap times? Get a coach, someone who will show you how to drive the lines. Yeah sometimes we all think we are good but you'll be amazed at how much you really learn with a coach.

Buddy coaches at BIR. He coaches a guy who drives a stock Super Snake, within one yr he improved his lap time by 3 seconds and still improving. His son also improved his lap times by watching his fathers videos. ;)

The car maybe fast, but doesn't mean the driver is fast.

0101 09-18-2014 10:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by damian_mb (Post 2969172)
Want to improve lap times? Get a coach, someone who will show you how to drive the lines. Yeah sometimes we all think we are good but you'll be amazed at how much you really learn with a coach.

This is true.
From my track experience, the biggest things I found were:
- Treat the brakes like an on/off switch. 100% on, and then get off them 100%. Wait until the last second to hit them. Be violent about it. Don't ride the brakes at all.
- Try to get into the gas earlier, experiment with how quick you can get back on the gas. Somewhere mid corner.
- Look Up!!! This is the biggest thing. Always look up, look far ahead.

osbornsm 09-18-2014 11:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by damian_mb (Post 2969172)
Want to improve lap times? Get a coach, someone who will show you how to drive the lines.

Quote:

Originally Posted by osbornsm (Post 2965371)
This is also excluding the loose nut behind the wheel... I'm working on my HPDE practice :driving:

:tiphat:


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