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Spring rate help?

Originally Posted by j-rho By itself, it can't begin to tell you that. What you might be able to say - if you had a neutral car, and then you

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Old 08-13-2014, 10:18 PM   #11 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by j-rho View Post
By itself, it can't begin to tell you that.

What you might be able to say - if you had a neutral car, and then you increased front spring rate, or softened the rear spring rate (increased that ratio value), the car would probably tend to understeer. But that's the opposite of what you're saying.
I am dividing front/back, you could just as easily divide rear/back and see it inverse. All that matters is the number of units it is away from 1.

Just like 90 is 90% of 100, and 100 is basically 110% of 90(with some rounding problems). Pretty sure we are on same page.

What I am getting at is that if you mess with that ratio, it induces one or the other-oversteer or understeer. If you think the car understeers, you can reduce that understeer by 10%, or you can increase oversteer by 10% the same way-by increasing or decreasing that ratio. The factory sets it a particular way to make the car safe(.80-.89 generally, or 1.1-1.9 inversely). Almost across the board unless you buy a Ferrari, factory race car, or something else I can not afford.

The post market spring kits aren't reducing understeer or increasing oversteer with their rates(none that I can find and will post all the ones I know if you want). They are just increasing the ride rate(not to be confused with ride frequency). Increasing ride rate is great, and yes will reduce some understeer naturally on a car where the suspension is too soft overall. That is not what I am talking about at all.

An experienced track driver of a car instinctively knows, that a ratio of .89 (as I describe it) is not "fast". That's why the "performance coilover" solutions invert that number and come in at ~1.11(or .89 of OEM understeer the way you are describing). It feels fast! And by all accounts is fast. It's a major improvement over the understeer induced slosh bucket designed by the oem setup engineers.

The higher wheel rates alone make the driver feel faster, take the slosh out of the ride, and they also help prevent suspension geometry problems by eating up some shock travel and lowering CG. It's honestly a brilliant solution at a very good price.

So at that point , unless someone has a question, I give up too.
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