06-01-2010, 08:44 AM
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#1
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Littleton, CO
Posts: 456
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike_Yi
It could be possible that you are turning in too fast, and quickly breaking the grip of the front tires. It sounds like your turn entry speeds are just a bit too high. Enter the corner slower so you can get back on the gas earliers, and that will get you around the track faster than reducing your braking. I've never had a problem understeering at the track.
BTW, what tire pressures were you using? I don't go with stock pressures at the track. IIRC, I use somewhere around 32-34 cold all the way around.
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Thanks for the response, Mike. While it is possible I'm turning in too fast, I think it is unlikely. I tried many different driving styles, and the only thing that seemed to work was trail braking. While I have a lot to learn, I do know the basics. This year I am instructing with NASA.
I tried a wide variety of tire pressures. As little as 23 cold (!) to 36 cold. All four tires would go up 8 psi when hot. Pressure differentials from front to rear were anywhere from 2 to 9 psi.
__________________
"Of all the extreme sports I've ever participated in- windsurfing, kite boarding, wake boarding, tow-in surfing and snowboarding- skiing, for me, made everything else easy."
-Chuck Patterson
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06-01-2010, 09:58 AM
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#2
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Atlanta
Posts: 1,820
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understeer really is a big issue on these cars w/ stock settings. it took me awhile to get my car dialed in so it would rotate instead of plow.
you mentioned trying to change the camber settings without messing up any other alignment settings. FYI, not possible. changing the camber on this car will change the toe. you will need to do a full alignment.
you should be able to get around -1.6 deg up front without camber plates or longer control arms. this is actually plenty for street tires. try -1.2 up front and -1.8 in back. zero out the toe front and rear. finally, run HIGHER tire pressures up front than in back (trust me on this). the RE050A is a decent tire; try 34F / 30R for cold pressures.
if you do all of this, understeer should not be much of an issue.
IMO, those who haven't had understeer issues w/ a stock boxster at the track are not driving fast enough. understeer quickly becomes the barrier to going faster, and is therefore a problem. reducing the understeer = faster lap times.
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06-01-2010, 11:00 AM
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#3
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Canada
Posts: 94
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What is the reasoning for the higher pressures up front? With my car with an aggressive alignment tends to work best when all the hot pressures are even. It does depend on the track of course, but most times the cold pressures end up within around 1psi of each other.
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06-01-2010, 11:08 AM
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#4
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Atlanta
Posts: 1,820
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mdex
What is the reasoning for the higher pressures up front? With my car with an aggressive alignment tends to work best when all the hot pressures are even. It does depend on the track of course, but most times the cold pressures end up within around 1psi of each other.
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depends on a lot of factors. i personally prefer a car that is VERY neutral (most would think it oversteers); this is faster for me because the car is most 'neutral' when i'm fully on throttle (rather than an understeering car that is most neutral when you lift a bit).
to cure the understeer, we want a bit more grip up front. we do this IN THIS CASE by adding pressure to the front tires.
i say IN THIS CASE because people will argue that increasing the pressure will DECREASE grip & that lowering the pressure will increase the size of the contact patch & add grip. tires are funny things. above & below a certain range, lowering the pressure WILL increase grip. however, within a specific range, adding air actually increases the efficiency of the tire & adds grip.
at any rate, i know from experience with THIS tire and THIS car that 34F/30R helps to neutralize understeer. give it a shot.
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06-01-2010, 12:22 PM
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#5
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Littleton, CO
Posts: 456
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Fantastic! Thank you VERY much for the info. It's nice to have technical resources available here in addition to the common problems/mods people discuss. I'll let you guys know how things turn out.
If anyone else has something to add I'd love to hear it.
__________________
"Of all the extreme sports I've ever participated in- windsurfing, kite boarding, wake boarding, tow-in surfing and snowboarding- skiing, for me, made everything else easy."
-Chuck Patterson
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06-01-2010, 12:48 PM
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#6
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Southern New jersey
Posts: 1,054
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Would these pressures be adviseable on the street? I'd like to reduce the understeer, though some is due to the rear weight bias, which gives great rear grip. In tight turns (on the street), I tend to hit the throttle to soon, causing power-on understeer.
I also think Porsche did TOO good of a job in eliminating trailing throttle oversteer. I'd like the car to rotate more with a throttle lift, for mid-corner corrections. I've never driven a car so stable off the gas and trail-braking, even with the PSM off. (MY06) I find the PSM very intrusive if I'm trying to have fun, it kicks in way too early. But, it's great for joe blow, or if you're not paying attention, you couldn't spin the car if you tried!
Steve
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06-01-2010, 01:36 PM
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#7
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Atlanta
Posts: 1,820
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stephen wilson
Would these pressures be adviseable on the street? I'd like to reduce the understeer, though some is due to the rear weight bias, which gives great rear grip. In tight turns (on the street), I tend to hit the throttle to soon, causing power-on understeer.
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yes this will also work on the street. the understeer is due more to factory setup than to the rear weight bias.
Quote:
Originally Posted by stephen wilson
I also think Porsche did TOO good of a job in eliminating trailing throttle oversteer. I'd like the car to rotate more with a throttle lift, for mid-corner corrections. I've never driven a car so stable off the gas and trail-braking, even with the PSM off. (MY06) I find the PSM very intrusive if I'm trying to have fun, it kicks in way too early. But, it's great for joe blow, or if you're not paying attention, you couldn't spin the car if you tried!
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again, this is due to a large extent to porsche's OEM setup. understeer is SAFE for road cars because, to the untrained driver, it is a self-correcting phenomenon. the instinct is to lift off the gas & this solves the problem. oversteer, on the other hand, requires a trained response. porsche spent a long time trying to engineer turn-in on throttle lift for road cars. we can, of course, add this feature with a few mods. by FAR the most bang for the buck here is a rear sway bar upgrade. simply swapping to the BASE model's M030 sway bar makes a HUGE difference.
with the right setup, a mid-engined car will rotate like a top; all the mass from the motor/tranny is right at the center of the car. this means VERY short polar moments of inertia. this can be a blessing.....and a curse.
another reason the car is tough to rotate with power ON is because it lacks a limited slip diff. right about the time the car is putting down enough power to cause power-on OS, the inside tire will spin.
i have experimented EXTENSIVELY with various isolated & incremental mods to the 986. if anyone has questions about how different things WILL effect handling (NOT are likely to, WILL) on this car, fire away. i have tried all KINDS of stuff, street & track. i have logged data to back a lot of it up.
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06-01-2010, 01:33 PM
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#8
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Canada
Posts: 94
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Quote:
Originally Posted by insite
depends on a lot of factors. i personally prefer a car that is VERY neutral (most would think it oversteers); this is faster for me because the car is most 'neutral' when i'm fully on throttle (rather than an understeering car that is most neutral when you lift a bit).
to cure the understeer, we want a bit more grip up front. we do this IN THIS CASE by adding pressure to the front tires.
i say IN THIS CASE because people will argue that increasing the pressure will DECREASE grip & that lowering the pressure will increase the size of the contact patch & add grip. tires are funny things. above & below a certain range, lowering the pressure WILL increase grip. however, within a specific range, adding air actually increases the efficiency of the tire & adds grip.
at any rate, i know from experience with THIS tire and THIS car that 34F/30R helps to neutralize understeer. give it a shot.
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I never have issues with front end grip, it is mostly about balancing it with the rear with my set up so getting more front end grip isn't normally my concern. I tried running larger tires up front (actually due to stock sizing not being available in time for the next track day) and the extra grip in the front slowed things down as I wasn't able to get on the gas as early coming out of high speed corners.
What tires / sizes are you running?
I find that a 26psi to 28psi cold temp all the way around gives a dead neutral car on most "R" tires with my setup. I guess alignment and other issues have a big part in our tire pressure balance front to rear and car to car.
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06-01-2010, 01:38 PM
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#9
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Atlanta
Posts: 1,820
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mdex
I never have issues with front end grip, it is mostly about balancing it with the rear with my set up so getting more front end grip isn't normally my concern. I tried running larger tires up front (actually due to stock sizing not being available in time for the next track day) and the extra grip in the front slowed things down as I wasn't able to get on the gas as early coming out of high speed corners.
What tires / sizes are you running?
I find that a 26psi to 28psi cold temp all the way around gives a dead neutral car on most "R" tires with my setup. I guess alignment and other issues have a big part in our tire pressure balance front to rear and car to car.
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mdex - keep in mind you're running r-comp & the OP is running street tires. also, his car is stock. if you're on r-comp, i'm guessing you have a few other bits installed that help neutralize the handling.
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06-01-2010, 01:49 PM
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#10
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Canada
Posts: 94
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Quote:
Originally Posted by insite
mdex - keep in mind you're running r-comp & the OP is running street tires. also, his car is stock. if you're on r-comp, i'm guessing you have a few other bits installed that help neutralize the handling.
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True that... but driving stock cars as well (and even on street tires!) I still have found that most understeer can be dialed out (or at least back to the point that most people don't notice it) with alignment.... which gets us back to the original posters question as well, not that I am not enjoying our discussion on set up overall with our cars.
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