Moderator: 3ne2nr Mods
Alpha_2nr wrote:Was it cusco that made a rear torsion bar support (that mounts under the spring mounts from end to end) for the rear? Might be something worth considering.
H Brace
rdeonarine wrote:Ultra racing is good stuff, had a FU on my car over a year and the handling has somewhat improved, i bought mine from UR USA tho, i am contemplating adding the 19mm rear anti roll bar as well as the RU strut
Ignorant Ignis wrote:rdeonarine wrote:Ultra racing is good stuff, had a FU on my car over a year and the handling has somewhat improved, i bought mine from UR USA tho, i am contemplating adding the 19mm rear anti roll bar as well as the RU strut
how much did you end up paying for it? ... just curious
Big Z wrote:Initial impressions:
Driving out onto the road, the increased chassis stiffness was immediately noticeable.
Steering response was improved. Changes in direction were much faster.
Corner entry speed is now higher and car stays flatter through the corner.
Noted increase in oversteer when pushed. Didn't push too hard, so can't say exactly how much of an increase. The Swift Sport is already biased to oversteer, so I will have to be very careful with this one.
This truly should be your first handling upgrade. Next up will be a rear strut bar and lower H frame.
Currently my set up is 22mm in the front, 21mm in the back (sway bars) with 310ft. lbs springs in the front, and 230ft. lbs springs in the back... no rubber bushings anywhere. I'm almost neutral and I still dont feel the benefits of the front strut bar... It looks good though
Big Z wrote:Its great that you have an opinion. Now move along. There's nothing to see here.
Alpha_2nr wrote:Just to clarify our posts tho jnqaz, when we say oversteer....we mean sudden-throttle lift oversteer. Typical hard cornering leads to understeer in the SSS, as with most FWD cars. It gets more pronouced at corner exit when the car cannot pull itself out of the corner as well because of the front OPEN diff (non LSD).
If you go hard into a corner and lift suddenly/jab the brakes at the right time, you can get the back of the car to slide just a little. Myabe it's a function of the stock camber setup?
Alpha_2nr wrote:Currently my set up is 22mm in the front, 21mm in the back (sway bars) with 310ft. lbs springs in the front, and 230ft. lbs springs in the back... no rubber bushings anywhere. I'm almost neutral and I still dont feel the benefits of the front strut bar... It looks good though
What car and what drive layout? Using "spherical" bushings?
thats called snap oversteer and it happens to any car
But, I still stand by my point that I dont believe that it would oversteer.
Alpha_2nr wrote:thats called snap oversteer and it happens to any car
Yes...but not in the same way (i.e throttle let off)......at least not in my limited experience![]()
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It doesn't happen on my "AWD" at all...snap oversteer on that comes from rapid power application following throttle let off (rear LSD vs open front diff). Also, in that car, throttle let off (without power application after) further promotes understeer. So in even an increasing radius corner, applying power too early (or gearing down just too early and applying power) means that rear can starte to "wiggle" a little bit(interpret as you will).
In my "RWD" car, I've never noticed much....but then again I've never switched of the TSC/DSC system....so I can't say here. That car is pretty neutral though most times...and the weight distribution is touted in the brochures as such![]()
In my daily "FWD" car, that strangely enough, just has a hint of understeer with a slight rear push on throttle let off, as you said.But, I still stand by my point that I dont believe that it would oversteer.
Correct. No man'fr is going to make a car that oversteers.....stock....unless of course you factor in agitation/upsetting the car's balance......which is kinda what I'm alluding to with my "AWD" car.
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