tylerrocks
New Member
mdjay said:......600# and KYB's in the front are a nice combo for a SB on the street![]()
I just dont see how you could make this statment. I have maier 600# an kyb's and I cant stand it.
Tyler
mdjay said:......600# and KYB's in the front are a nice combo for a SB on the street![]()
I've seen Mike drive as well and my god is it amazing. But in addition to his driving talent, you also have to look at how his car is setup. The suspension geometry of his car is nothing like ours.mdjay said:I'm no pro! I just know from what I've seen, driven and discussed.
I've heard the contradictory, heavier spring rate and less bar, the driving style pref. quote is key.
With more sway bar, you are lifting the inside tire when the body rolls. The sway bar itself is a spring. Most of the racer's that I know tend to go toward the higher spring rate theory and less bar. Especially in the back.
Mike Maier seems to do pretty well with the higher spring rate theory. Granted he can drive the piss out of any car
We're talkin' race cars here so this is in extreme applications. Street driving applications are more forgiving and you would set the car up more for versatility (ie somewhere in the middle).
600# and KYB's in the front are a nice combo for a SB on the street![]()
So, with that said, the theory is you run the lightest spring you can get away with. Now, if you're lifting the inside tire (as per your example) then that would be a situation where you would probably want to try less bar and more spring. It doesn't mean to chuck your 500lb springs for some 700's and ditch the sway bar. It's all about tuning. Same can be applied with the rear. You always hear about people who run stiff rear springs and say their car handles like crap with a rear bar. The most likely cause is there's too much rear roll stiffness.Herb Adams Chassi Engineering said:The two most common means of controlling the roll stiffness on any given car are via the springs and the stabilizer bars.
Increasing the spring rates will reduce roll angle. Unfortunately, raising the spring rates can also change other aspects of the car's handling. As an example, if a car had a front spring rate of 700 lbs.-inch and a roll angle of 2 degrees, and you wanted to reduce the roll angle to 1 degree, you'd need to install 1400 lbs-in. front springs. This would double the roll resistance. But increasing the spring rates this much would also upset the ride motions and cause the car to understeer.
The best way to increase roll stiffness is to increase the size or effectiveness of the stabilizer bars. If a car is to roll, one wheel will be up in compression and one wheel will be in drooping down. Stabilizer bars limit the roll angle of a car by using their torsional stiffness to resist the movement of one wheel up and one wheel down....Since the forces that cause the car to roll are being absorbed by the stabilizer bar, and these forces are fed into each lower control arm, the outside tire loadings will increase as the stabilizer bar twists.

kwkenf said:Which KYB's is everyone talking about?
Gas-A-Just
or
GR-2
Thanks,