Above Forum Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse

Email Notifications Failing (mostly Telstra)

Hello everyone. Seems there is an issue with Telstra (possible others) blocking email from our server. If you are trying to sign up I would suggest a different email if possible. If you're trying to reset your password and it fails please use the Contact Us page:
See more
See less

Tramlining & Excessive Torque Steer.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • More caster can help with minimising tamlining, plus FWD's are often very sensitive to toe settings. Different camber settings side to side can also contribute to torque steer. In order, maximise the caster, even up the camber and then I'd suggest trying a few different toe settings. Toe out will make it handle better but maybe accentuate the torque steer. So try some toe in, say 2 mm each side and see how it feels. If it mostly torque steers one way then I'd also check the wheelbase, side to side.

    The most common cause of torque steer, once worn or out of alignment components is eliminated, is excessive scrub radius. With negative scrub radius the wheels tend to self align, that's why it's often found on some manufacturers FWD's. If you have changed the wheels and/or added spacers then I'd suggest checking the scrub radius. Zero or a small amount positive is OK, but too much, say 10 to 15 mm, will commonly cause torque steer.

    Cheers
    Gary
    Golf Mk7.5 R, Volvo S60 Polestar, Skyline R32GTST

    Comment


    • Yeah I must admit when I was running my ET43's with 20mm spacers it had more torque steer than my ET40s with 8mm spacers. Effective ET23 vs ET32. Even with effective ET32 wheel offset, the scrub radius position couldnt be too far off standard (standard wheels were ET43- ET3 , going from 3mm front toe out total to 1mm has a definite beneficial effect on torque steer all things being equal. Having said that I ran 3.5 ish mm total toe out at Wakefield and barely noticed it (smooth surface, flowing track) but then with even with more tyre on a bumpy public road hillclimb, 2mm felt like It was going to be spit me off into a tree - the amount of wheel fight was crazy. So for me, the way track surface can promote loss of adhesian (and kick off torque steer) is also a big determinate off how much front toe out I can feel comfortable pushing with. So like Gary said, starting with slight toe in and working your way out from there would be a good way to find the torque steer threshold you are comfortable with.

      Comment

      Working...
      X