Re: 32mm sway bar installed!!
Sigh. Everyone please ignore the last post. But this is important. Your recommendation is not correct.
If you can "make the back end step out smoothly and predictably" on dry pavement when you're concentrating, the car has _way_ too much oversteer. Bigger rims don't help this, they just make the point at which it oversteers come later.
Two problems. The minor one is that it ain't fast. Any oversteer at all means the rear tires are overloaded. Overloaded rears can't accelerate the car maximally coming off a corner, you have to feather the gas.
The major one is that it ain't safe. What is smooth and predictable on dry pavement when you're concentrating can become an uncontrollable spin on wet pavement or when you make an emergency swerve to avoid something.
Look, the bottom line is that, if you can slide the rear on dry pavement, you have the wrong rear bar for the car. Your car would handle better with a smaller rear bar, rims or no rims. So I don't recommend the 21 rear. Why would you want something other than the best setup, when this is such an inexpensive thing to change? I know it feels cool to slide the rear, but it's not the hot setup.
Carroll Smith (who actually does deserve an "all hail"), in "Drive to Win". "The inexperienced driver feels heroically fast and the crowd is thrilled when the rear slides. In some ways it's a pity that it's not the fast way around the track." and "Every fast race car has some understeer".
Originally posted by 5_spd_pewter_v6
If you can "make the back end step out smoothly and predictably" on dry pavement when you're concentrating, the car has _way_ too much oversteer. Bigger rims don't help this, they just make the point at which it oversteers come later.
Two problems. The minor one is that it ain't fast. Any oversteer at all means the rear tires are overloaded. Overloaded rears can't accelerate the car maximally coming off a corner, you have to feather the gas.
The major one is that it ain't safe. What is smooth and predictable on dry pavement when you're concentrating can become an uncontrollable spin on wet pavement or when you make an emergency swerve to avoid something.
Look, the bottom line is that, if you can slide the rear on dry pavement, you have the wrong rear bar for the car. Your car would handle better with a smaller rear bar, rims or no rims. So I don't recommend the 21 rear. Why would you want something other than the best setup, when this is such an inexpensive thing to change? I know it feels cool to slide the rear, but it's not the hot setup.
Carroll Smith (who actually does deserve an "all hail"), in "Drive to Win". "The inexperienced driver feels heroically fast and the crowd is thrilled when the rear slides. In some ways it's a pity that it's not the fast way around the track." and "Every fast race car has some understeer".
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