piccola said:
There have been several threads re: weight reduction & I'm curious about something... Does it matter where in the car the weight is removed (ie, lighter top end vs rear)? For instance, if at 125 lbs I'm driving and someone 200 lbs was driving, but took 75 lbs off the rear (assuming all other things were equal), would there be a difference in performance between the 2 cars? Also... for those of you who have modified the car, how much weight reduction is really needed to notice a difference? 50 lbs? 100 lbs? 200 lbs?
Thanks,
MJ
1. Re Speed and acceleration perfomance it does not matter where you reduce.
2. Re handling, it is always better to reduce as much as high as possible, this reduces roll in curves if you manage to lower center of gravity, anything over the wheelhubs particularily, and as far front and as far back.
3. Keep an eye on front, back balance of reduction, as it will change oversteer/understeer tendencies. if you take weight away in the back, understeer will result and the back more controllable. Sometimes not desireable.
Also less weight means the car gets stiffer in the springs,as they are setup for the weight the car comes with.
I once setup a car with frontwheel drive so balanced, that depending where I moved the seatposition or lean back with my upperbody I would be able to get oversteer out of it. moving the seat more forward and move up closer to the wheel, the back would not swing out (like in rain and stuff not always a nice tendency).
If you like more oversteer tendency to eliminate understeer in tight corners, e.g. for trackwork or hill climb, consider to have a slight toe in on the back( 1-2degrees), as the car will come back easier once in oversteer mode with more pressure and grip getting on the outside wheel, as the inside lifts up. That way you get a very responsive but controllable feel. The slight rubb on a straight won't be much noticed. But for quartermile events, rubber straight of course...
hope that helps !
stefan