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Old 06-18-2018, 06:52 AM   #1
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Originally Posted by Burg Boxster View Post
Regardless if you consider it a spoiler to 'spoil' the airflow over the vehicle (thus reducing lift) or a 'wing' to create addl downforce or both...

If the opposing force is not prevalent, specifically copious airflow volume vis-a-vis vehicle speed, then the wing/spoiler is merely a decoration. It's deployment is speed dependent for a reason... and I'm sure has A LARGE safety margin (~ 72MPH deployment and 55MPH retraction limits as I recall).

Think of it another way... You build a treadmill wide enough to accommodate a jet airplane's landing gear. You then put a jet on said treadmill and crank up speed so the jet's wheels/tires rotate as fast on this special treadmill as they would on a tarmac/runway during take-off. Does the jet take off? Of course not.

Good luck
I get that the auto deployment and the function and its is there for a reason to add traction, but they also added a manual deployment button for a reason.

Deployment speed is 72Mph and retract is 55 Mph, so that means you might need it or you might not in that range to get more traction.

My question is pointed at that specific speed range on a curvy road. If you are going from between 35 Mph to 85 Mph and hitting a curve a 55 ect.. the in between range I would think just deploying the wing would help keep you planted. At a lower speed I could not see it making you unstable.

So I will mark you in the No leave it in auto mode column.

My theory is that if you are driving more aggressive then you should just deploy the wing manually to have the benefits of the extra down force in the curves. Normal driving with wife and busy street leave it in auto mode to stabilize at high speed.

I am really interested in hearing from the track guys and their opinion.
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Old 06-18-2018, 07:46 AM   #2
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About the only time I raise the spoiler with the switch is when I wash the car and I want to dry the area where the spoiler retracts. Other than that it goes up and down based on speed.

PS . . I'm not a track guy.
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Old 06-18-2018, 07:53 AM   #3
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About the only time I raise the spoiler with the switch is when I wash the car and I want to dry the area where the spoiler retracts. Other than that it goes up and down based on speed.

PS . . I'm not a track guy.
Thanks nice and to the point! So thats 2 in the auto only mode.
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Old 06-18-2018, 08:53 AM   #4
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I get that the auto deployment and the function and its is there for a reason to add traction, but they also added a manual deployment button for a reason.

Deployment speed is 72Mph and retract is 55 Mph, so that means you might need it or you might not in that range to get more traction.

My question is pointed at that specific speed range on a curvy road. If you are going from between 35 Mph to 85 Mph and hitting a curve a 55 ect.. the in between range I would think just deploying the wing would help keep you planted. At a lower speed I could not see it making you unstable.

So I will mark you in the No leave it in auto mode column.

My theory is that if you are driving more aggressive then you should just deploy the wing manually to have the benefits of the extra down force in the curves. Normal driving with wife and busy street leave it in auto mode to stabilize at high speed.

I am really interested in hearing from the track guys and their opinion.
I am a track guy and, politely, you missed the answer entirely. BTW most AX courses, below extreme expert level, rarely if ever see speeds in excess of ~ 60MPH and even then only in very short bursts. So, AX is likely slower than a continuous curvy road you're driving. Nor did I suggest deploying below 55MPH or at slow speeds would make the vehicle unstable.

Simply this is a matter of physics. There's a world of difference b/w driving 35MPH vs 85MPH; at 35MPH, the rear spoiler, due to LACK of air flow/volume, will provide ZERO benefit. Where as being fully deployed at 85MPH would start to provide some benefit. But, and it's been greatly debated countless times, is said benefit spoiling of the airflow or using the airflow to increase downforce? They are NOT the same

Anecdotally, I once had a 997 C2S with front aerokit but not accompanying rear aerokit/wing. Porsche advised the rear aerokit wing was necessary for stability purposes, but I ignored their 'requirement'. Everything was fine, stability-wise, on the vehicle at speeds up to ~ 125MPH. Up from there the back end would get wiggly... not so noticeable on an incline where the g-forces are compressing the car into the pavement. However, a fast downhill like the back straight of Mid-Ohio got 'exciting' on more than a few occasions...

Regardless, correct, I'm in the No leave it in auto-mode column. But if you feel deploying provides benefit then by all means deploy the spoiler when and wherever you feel it will help as having confidence in your equipment does aid you in being a better driver.

I'd be curious to know the answer to this if you can loop back after testing:
If you manually deploy then exceed 72MPH and subsequently reduce speed back below 55MPH, will the spoiler automatically retract?

Good luck
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Old 06-18-2018, 10:01 AM   #5
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Originally Posted by Burg Boxster View Post
I am a track guy and, politely, you missed the answer entirely. BTW most AX courses, below extreme expert level, rarely if ever see speeds in excess of ~ 60MPH and even then only in very short bursts. So, AX is likely slower than a continuous curvy road you're driving. Nor did I suggest deploying below 55MPH or at slow speeds would make the vehicle unstable.

Simply this is a matter of physics. There's a world of difference b/w driving 35MPH vs 85MPH; at 35MPH, the rear spoiler, due to LACK of air flow/volume, will provide ZERO benefit. Where as being fully deployed at 85MPH would start to provide some benefit. But, and it's been greatly debated countless times, is said benefit spoiling of the airflow or using the airflow to increase downforce? They are NOT the same

Anecdotally, I once had a 997 C2S with front aerokit but not accompanying rear aerokit/wing. Porsche advised the rear aerokit wing was necessary for stability purposes, but I ignored their 'requirement'. Everything was fine, stability-wise, on the vehicle at speeds up to ~ 125MPH. Up from there the back end would get wiggly... not so noticeable on an incline where the g-forces are compressing the car into the pavement. However, a fast downhill like the back straight of Mid-Ohio got 'exciting' on more than a few occasions...

Regardless, correct, I'm in the No leave it in auto-mode column. But if you feel deploying provides benefit then by all means deploy the spoiler when and wherever you feel it will help as having confidence in your equipment does aid you in being a better driver.

I'd be curious to know the answer to this if you can loop back after testing:
If you manually deploy then exceed 72MPH and subsequently reduce speed back below 55MPH, will the spoiler automatically retract?

Good luck
Yeah use the auto criss as an example, I get the idea fast more wind more down force.

So my question simply is the any extra down force at lower speeds or not, which we still have no definative answer to that question. If it creates down force when its deployed must have some at 40 not as much as 85 of course.
So is there a point where it has no affect? What if you are going 50 and dring into a 35 mph head wind? Lol

Note in Owners manual says manual mode is active until its manually retracted.

Retracts about 50 Mph according to manual. Comments in the manual seem more concerned that it is deployed over 70 for stability. And referes to it as a spoiler, to be affective it has to build a high pressure point to force the car down.

Curious to here more input
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Old 06-18-2018, 10:12 AM   #6
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First off, I am a track guy.

Pre-production models of the 1st Boxsters did not have a spoiler. Porsche discovered at high speeds (WELL into triple digits) the back end began to lift. So as a last minute addition, the rear spoiler was drafted into production. It was defn needed on a vehicle that supposedly has a 160-170mph top speed. I would assume Porsche chose 75mph for it to deploy because of research they did, but don't know that for a fact. It may deploy at that speed because it would have a smaller, less adverse effect at that speed than popping it up at 100, IDK. The rush to get the problem solved before production began may be why the spoiler looks like an afterthought.

When I'm tracking my CSS, I manually set my spoiler to up. This is because the tracks I drive incl runs up to 130mph and several corners in the 30-50mph. The spoiler would be going up and down multiple times per lap. Since it's a mechanical device, I don't want it failing on one of those 130mph blasts.

Would not having the spoiler come up at 75 or 85 cause you to crash violently? Probably not. Would it provide any effect by having it up when driving 35? No. Can you drive it that slow with it up? Sure.

Burg - on my 987.1 CSS, when the spoiler is manually deployed, the spoiler stays up until you put it down manually. It does not operate on speed. Can't imagine they did it differently on a 986.
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Old 06-18-2018, 10:21 AM   #7
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Originally Posted by husker boxster View Post
First off, I am a track guy.

Pre-production models of the 1st Boxsters did not have a spoiler. Porsche discovered at high speeds (WELL into triple digits) the back end began to lift. So as a last minute addition, the rear spoiler was drafted into production. It was defn needed on a vehicle that supposedly has a 160-170mph top speed. I would assume Porsche chose 75mph for it to deploy because of research they did, but don't know that for a fact. It may deploy at that speed because it would have a smaller, less adverse effect at that speed than popping it up at 100, IDK. The rush to get the problem solved before production began may be why the spoiler looks like an afterthought.

When I'm tracking my CSS, I manually set my spoiler to up. This is because the tracks I drive incl runs up to 130mph and several corners in the 30-50mph. The spoiler would be going up and down multiple times per lap. Since it's a mechanical device, I don't want it failing on one of those 130mph blasts.

Would not having the spoiler come up at 75 or 85 cause you to crash violently? Probably not. Would it provide any effect by having it up when driving 35? No. Can you drive it that slow with it up? Sure.

Burg - on my 987.1 CSS, when the spoiler is manually deployed, the spoiler stays up until you put it down manually. It does not operate on speed. Can't imagine they did it differently on a 986.
Ah now we are getting to the heart of my question. I am Sure no stability issue with slower, but is there a traction benefit?

I suppose the 70 or 75 point was some type of tested safety zone.

Anyway, can you dicern more traction when taking the lower speed corners with the spoiler up, or not?

In theory should have some, but what does buttometer say?

I ask here as I have no oputunities for a driver course! Thanks
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Old 06-18-2018, 01:30 PM   #8
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Anyway, can you dicern more traction when taking the lower speed corners with the spoiler up, or not?

In theory should have some, but what does buttometer say?
No. You're pushing insignificant amts of air over the spoiler at low speed to feel any effect. If there was a benefit at slow speed, Porsche would have it pop up at a lower mph. Speed thru a 30-50mph corner is influenced more by:

what tires you're using
what pressure you're running in your tires
whether you're running a stock or modified suspension
what line you take thru the corner
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Old 06-18-2018, 01:37 PM   #9
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Be aware that Cup2s are not very good in the rain. They are track tires that "can" be used on the street. But their forte is dry track tire, not necessarily a street tire. If you're buying Cup2s, you should be running it primarily on a track, not the street.

You may have had PS2s, which is an old design and not a great tire IMHO - rides rough and takes significantly longer to warm up on the track than SuperSports or Conti DW.
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Old 06-18-2018, 02:45 PM   #10
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Be aware that Cup2s are not very good in the rain. They are track tires that "can" be used on the street. But their forte is dry track tire, not necessarily a street tire. If you're buying Cup2s, you should be running it primarily on a track, not the street.

You may have had PS2s, which is an old design and not a great tire IMHO - rides rough and takes significantly longer to warm up on the track than SuperSports or Conti DW.
In your opinion of course. I have used my Cup2s only on the road and even in winter and rain. Cup2 are fine in the rain a long as it isn't torrential or with big standing water. In the UK it can rain any time any day of the year. Also here and Europe there are a fair few standard cars released as standard on Cup2 or other manufacturer equivalent tyres. We get a bunch of hot hatches that you don't get on these and of course in the same stable the GT4.
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Old 06-18-2018, 04:06 PM   #11
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Ah now we are getting to the heart of my question. I am Sure no stability issue with slower, but is there a traction benefit?

I suppose the 70 or 75 point was some type of tested safety zone.

Anyway, can you dicern more traction when taking the lower speed corners with the spoiler up, or not?

In theory should have some, but what does buttometer say?

I ask here as I have no oputunities for a driver course! Thanks
My GUESS is the real benefits are at an even much higher speed than 70 or 75. Look at all the cars on the road with no spoilers and no issues at speed in that range and much higher. things get drastically different in higher speeds these cars are capable of. I understand that the shape of the car has everything to do with it. Porsche needed the spoiler to make the car safe at a much higher speed but didn't want to put a spoiler on that no one would see work until ultra illegal speeds(in the usa) so they made it come on at speeds that are legal. As far as the low on speed, once you determine you up speed you need a big gap for the down speed to prevent frequent up and down of the spoiler.
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