Tarett Prototype Rear Swaybar, Pics of install |
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Tarett Prototype Rear Swaybar, Pics of install |
eeyore |
Mar 29 2005, 04:23 PM
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#1
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 889 Joined: 8-January 04 From: meridian, id Member No.: 1,533 Region Association: None |
I'm the lucky sap who got to work with Ira at Tarett Engineering and have my car be the test mule for rear swaybar development.
We got a chance to test the prototype rear swaybar at the PCA SDR autocross last weekend. Here's all the gory details. I felt the need to be wordy so as to help provide and accurate picture. (The content are my own words. Although I have been given permission to discuss this, I want to make it clear that I am not speaking for Ira.) Attached image(s) |
eeyore |
Mar 29 2005, 04:25 PM
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#2
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 889 Joined: 8-January 04 From: meridian, id Member No.: 1,533 Region Association: None |
There were concerns that a rear swaybar causes inside wheel spin. This didn't seem to be the case, but I'll describe the course to qualify that.
The course went uphill from turn 4, crossed the slope and came back down around turn 8. Turn 1 was the tightest section of the course, requiring a redlined 2nd or bogged 3rd gear entry. There was no inside wheel spin here. Most wheelspin seemed to happen around Turn 4, an on-camber (?) corner. The right-left dogleg at 5 was more of a chicane/kink. Turn 7 & 8 where off-camber and the car tracked nicely through them as well. Attached image(s) |
eeyore |
Mar 29 2005, 04:26 PM
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#3
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 889 Joined: 8-January 04 From: meridian, id Member No.: 1,533 Region Association: None |
The Car:
'Tinkerbell' 1975 914 with 2.0 D-jet Type 4. Open differential. Front: 21mm torsion bars. Tarett swaybar- 22mm effective, set 55% stiff for entire day. Rear: 200 lbs springs. Tarett swaybar - 16mm effective. 50% stiff first half. Full soft second half. Shocks:Koni Yellows at all 4 corners. All set at half. Tires: Although the CS class permits use of stickier tires, Falken Azenis were fitted due to the car owner being a CSOB and having only one set of suitable rims. Tire pressures were finalized at 26 psi hot for timed runs. |
Aaron Cox |
Mar 29 2005, 04:26 PM
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#4
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Professional Lawn Dart Group: Retired Admin Posts: 24,541 Joined: 1-February 03 From: OC Member No.: 219 Region Association: Southern California |
way cool! it looks like it doesnt mount in the OE location.
if it is anything like the front bars they make...im sure they will be bitchin! (IMG:http://www.914world.com/bbs2/html/emoticons/smilie_pokal.gif) |
eeyore |
Mar 29 2005, 04:29 PM
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#5
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 889 Joined: 8-January 04 From: meridian, id Member No.: 1,533 Region Association: None |
The Drivers:
Might as well explain who was driving the thing. Sometime club member DB-- 2003 PCA-SDR CS class champ. Ex-motorcycle racer, starting 4th season of autocross. Me: 6th autocross. Usually 4 seconds behind DB at previous events. TTOD was 1:10. The majority of 914-4s were in the 1:23 to 1:25 range (some on Kumho Ecstas). The outlier of the event was the CS class winner on brand new Kumhos at 1:19.xx (jerk!). DB posted a best time of 1:23.11, I posted a best of 1:24.72. |
eeyore |
Mar 29 2005, 04:38 PM
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#6
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 889 Joined: 8-January 04 From: meridian, id Member No.: 1,533 Region Association: None |
Initial set-up, rear swaybar at 50% stiff
On slow transitions into sweeping turns, oversteer existed but was not a terrible problem. However, negotiating the slalom was very difficult. The car would make the first turn, but the rapid transition to the next would just swing the back end right out. The abruptness instilled a bit of hesitation in me on the slalom for the remainder of the day. There were occasional incidents of inside rear-wheel spin, but also some incidents of (slight) throttle-on oversteer. Second set-up, rear swaybar at full soft Great improvement. The oversteer had gone from abrupt to very mild/just right. The car became very predictable. Happiness was restored. DB went from dissatisfaction with the car to pleased. The car could be tossed from side to side without worry of the back end coming around. There seemed to be more incidents where the car could coaxed into throttle-on oversteer and very little (zero?) incidents of inside rear-wheel spin. |
Jeroen |
Mar 29 2005, 04:42 PM
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#7
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914 Guru Group: Members Posts: 7,887 Joined: 24-December 02 From: The Netherlands Member No.: 3 Region Association: Europe |
post more pics!!!
lets see the mount |
brant |
Mar 29 2005, 04:49 PM
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#8
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914 Wizard Group: Members Posts: 11,635 Joined: 30-December 02 From: Colorado Member No.: 47 Region Association: Rocky Mountains |
I'd be curious if there was a control, where the drop link was disconnected and the car was run with no bar?
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Aaron Cox |
Mar 29 2005, 04:51 PM
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#9
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Professional Lawn Dart Group: Retired Admin Posts: 24,541 Joined: 1-February 03 From: OC Member No.: 219 Region Association: Southern California |
aahhhh... fulfilling the scientific method (IMG:http://www.914world.com/bbs2/html/emoticons/smile.gif) |
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eeyore |
Mar 29 2005, 04:52 PM
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#10
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 889 Joined: 8-January 04 From: meridian, id Member No.: 1,533 Region Association: None |
Location of the swaybar was an exercise in compromise – Will only racers use these? How stock will people want their cars?
The stock swaybar attaches to pads welded onto the cross member and bends around the transmission mounts. Hollow swaybars are straight, so the normal ‘stock’ position wasn’t too likely. The bar had to either be entirely in behind or forward of the transmission mounts. With the bar located behind the transmission mount, there were clearance issues because of the muffler heat shield (red arrows). To avoid the head shield, the bar would have to be set up fairly high, necessitating the arms to have a dogleg shape to get back underneath the crossmember. During initial brainstorming there are also issues with ’75 and ’76 cars which have additional gussets for mounting the ugly bumpers (blue arrow). Locating the bar forward of the crossmember permitted the use less complicated arms. It fits neatly above the transmission. Attached image(s) |
Aaron Cox |
Mar 29 2005, 04:54 PM
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#11
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Professional Lawn Dart Group: Retired Admin Posts: 24,541 Joined: 1-February 03 From: OC Member No.: 219 Region Association: Southern California |
lets see the mounts and a top view from inside the rear trunl (IMG:http://www.914world.com/bbs2/html/emoticons/smile.gif) (IMG:http://www.914world.com/bbs2/html/emoticons/smilie_pokal.gif)
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grantsfo |
Mar 29 2005, 04:56 PM
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#12
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Arrrrhhhh! Group: Members Posts: 4,327 Joined: 16-March 03 Member No.: 433 Region Association: None |
I wonder if running higher pressures in the Falkens would have helped with the slalom. I have always felt Falkens get real sloppy in transitions at anything under 34 psi and I often run them even higher. I can get my car to become much more "whippy" in transitions when I bring Falkens below 30 psi.
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Aaron Cox |
Mar 29 2005, 04:58 PM
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#13
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Professional Lawn Dart Group: Retired Admin Posts: 24,541 Joined: 1-February 03 From: OC Member No.: 219 Region Association: Southern California |
i agree... i run 38 PSI rear and 36 front |
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eeyore |
Mar 29 2005, 05:00 PM
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#14
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 889 Joined: 8-January 04 From: meridian, id Member No.: 1,533 Region Association: None |
Alas no. The scientific method was not completely employed, although I tried. Time constraints between run groups limited the amount of twiddling. We also didn't have any baseline settings for a front-only setup, so that would have consumed practice laps as well. The desire to not get completely whomped during timed runs factored in as well -- coming in dead last wouldn't be a good testimony for the product, even if the product had nothing to do with it. The final mount design is still under consideration. Right now the mount is assembled together from the parts bin and bolted to the trunk floor with additional metal stiffeners. Pictures of it would elicit a GADZOOKS! or worse. Probably worse. |
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eeyore |
Mar 29 2005, 05:11 PM
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#15
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 889 Joined: 8-January 04 From: meridian, id Member No.: 1,533 Region Association: None |
Thanks for the tire pressure info!
Tire pressures were a gray area... I think the low pressures were carried over from Kumho Victoracer experience. There were reports of some guys running 42 psi with Azenis, but that seemed a little extreme. |
Aaron Cox |
Mar 29 2005, 05:13 PM
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#16
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Professional Lawn Dart Group: Retired Admin Posts: 24,541 Joined: 1-February 03 From: OC Member No.: 219 Region Association: Southern California |
35 psi is theminimum i run mine, they just dont stick under that threshold...... feels sloshy (IMG:http://www.914world.com/bbs2/html/emoticons/dry.gif) (IMG:http://www.914world.com/bbs2/html/emoticons/unsure.gif) |
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Trekkor |
Mar 29 2005, 06:04 PM
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#17
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I do things... Group: Members Posts: 7,809 Joined: 2-December 03 From: Napa, Ca Member No.: 1,413 Region Association: Northern California |
Nice progress report!
I agree as to the higher tire pressures. I used to run 41psi rear and 39psi front with great schticktion. (IMG:http://www.914world.com/bbs2/html/emoticons/wink.gif) Give us more pics and tuning experiences. Do you need to jack up the car to adjust or is there room to work? Does the bar preload as you adjust from side to side? KT |
Dave_Darling |
Mar 29 2005, 06:13 PM
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#18
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914 Idiot Group: Members Posts: 14,991 Joined: 9-January 03 From: Silicon Valley / Kailua-Kona Member No.: 121 Region Association: Northern California |
How are the arms of the bar oriented when the car is at rest with weight on the rear wheels? I would be worried that the arms might under some circumstances contact the trunk floor, which really sucks for handling let me tell you. The stocker does this some times on lowered cars with soft-ish springs. Especially when the car encounters a bump in the turn.
--DD |
eeyore |
Mar 29 2005, 06:19 PM
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#19
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 889 Joined: 8-January 04 From: meridian, id Member No.: 1,533 Region Association: None |
Even though I'm a very thickly torsoed, I was able to squeeze under the rear valence and make adjustments. But, my car was running about 1 inch higher compared to other cars.
This brings up a good point. It would be good to know what the average ride height of A-X and race 914s are to get an idea of the final droplink length. Measured from ground to fender top, at wheel center. The bar does preload from side to side, but it is slight. I could hand crank the droplinks a few turns with the car on the ground. |
eeyore |
Mar 29 2005, 06:22 PM
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#20
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 889 Joined: 8-January 04 From: meridian, id Member No.: 1,533 Region Association: None |
Here's a close-up of the shock bolt.
Attached image(s) |
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