Here's where we start to geek out on the suspension a little. First, some definitions for those who aren't 100% up on this stuff:
Roll center: An imaginary point at which a suspension rolls about. Old cars had quite low roll centers in the front, more modern cars have higher roll centers to control roll without stiff springs or sways. The roll center is complicated to describe, but if you draw a line between the center of the tire's contact patch through the instant center of the suspension, for each side of the car, the roll center will be where those lines cross each other. It can be above or below the ground, and it can be to the left or to the right of the center of the car. Ideally it shouldn't move around too much in relation to the body's center of gravity.
Roll couple: The distance between the roll center and the body's center of gravity, creating a roll moment. Increase cornering force or weight, or increase the distance between the center of gravity and the roll center, and the car will generate more roll moment.
Roll axis: A line drawn between the front and rear roll centers. Front suspension roll centers are usually much lower than those in the rear on live axle cars, a bit more level on independent suspension cars.
Camber gain: The tendency for a suspension to gain (or lose) negative camber upon compression. A good front suspension will have this feature tailored to keep the tire planted at all times.
Instant center: This is an imaginary point in space where lines drawn through the upper and lower suspension pivot points meet. Extend a line through the upper balljoint and upper inner pivot, and another line through the lower balljoint and lower inner pivot, and where those lines meet is the instant center.
Swing arm length: In a 1:1 relationship with camber gain, the swing arm length is the distance between the instant center and the wheel. Shorter swing arm lengths mean more camber gain, but too short can also cause handling issues.
Front Lateral Load Distribution: The FLLD is analogous to the relative roll stiffness of the front suspension, compared to the total roll stiffness of the car. This takes into account roll couples at each end plus the stiffness of the front & rear springs & sways.
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Stock, at rest, the front suspension roll center of a 122 is at ground level due to the arms being parallel and horizontal. Since the arms are parallel, camber gain is zero and the swing arm is infinite. When you lower the car on lowering springs, the roll center drops below ground by approximately the same distance that the car's been lowered: 1.5" lowered car means the RC is 1.5" below grade, and this is good because it maintains the same roll couple as at stock height. The net result is that the center of gravity is lowered so it won't put as much load on the outside tire, but with the same roll couple the car will roll as much as it did before (minus the effect of stiffer springs, if present). Since the control arms on a 122 are so long (relative to the width of the car) there isn't much camber gain, and all the roll you get in corners (no matter the height of the body) puts more positive camber into the outside tire, which ruins handling. There IS slightly more camber gain at this new lowered position, but not much.
The rear roll center is where the panhard rod crosses the body centerline - that's the way it is with beam axles - and when you lower the car 1" the roll center drops 1/2". The roll couple in the rear reduces a little, so the rear end doesn't generate as much roll moment. Since the front roll center has dropped more than the rear, the roll axis gets steeper. This means that the car is rolling less on a horizontal axis, if you can picture it, and this causes some handling traits that could be considered "old fashioned".
So what does this all mean in my car? Well, the low front roll center and the stiff springs & stiff front sway combine to give me an FLLD of 70%, according to the suspension analysis program I'm running. In theory the FLLD should be about 5%, numerically, than the front weight distribution. On a car with 52%/48% F/R distribution, AND with everything else squared away nicely, the FLLD will be in the neighborhood of 57%. 70% suggests that I've got a TON of understeer, and this is exactly what I found in steady state cornering. Additionally, I've got a compromised camber condition: I know the car rolls more than 1.5 degrees, so in hard cornering my outside tire has lost all of it's static negative camber and is going into positive camber, and the high tire pressure in the front (needed to try and help the edges of the tire survive) reduces grip even further due to reduced rubber on the road.
Analyzing the front suspension, and building on past experience, I believe I will try lowering the front inner pivots (the "dogbones") by 1" this winter. Doing this does two things: first of all, it raises the roll center from 1.5" below grade to 1" above grade and will reduce the roll couple by quite a margin. This will make the FLLD a little worse, though, but changing the dogbone position also gives me a lot more camber gain so it will help keep the outside tire vertical and should give me more front end grip right there. My program tells me that the camber gain is currently 0.38 degrees per inch of travel, and it will change to 1 degree per inch with the new setup. If I keep the current 1.5 degrees of static camber, the car will be able to roll more than 2.5 degrees before the tire goes positive camber. That's good. I would also like to get the FLLD a little closer to correct, which means I'll have to put the rear sway bar in and possibly replace the IPD front bar with a stock one. With the reduced roll couple that much bar might not be needed anymore to control the roll.
(by "past experience" I mean on Dale's car, where we lowered the dogbone by 2" and that created some other issues. The swing arm length got really short, and at his lowered stance the negative camber was pretty extreme. There were some bump steer issues too. The car did go around corners well, though!)
The loose transition could be down to a couple things. First, the tires. They're sooper squishy, with full depth all season treads, and are tuned by Continental more for all season performance and good ride/quietness rather than sharp handling. I chose them for these qualities, but I think the tradeoff is that I'll have to drive it a little more carefully to let the loads build up more gradually than when I spasmodically hack away at the wheel in the slaloms. Another problem could be the shocks: They're Bilstiens from VPD, but I don't believe they're the revalved VPD version. The rears are mighty stiff compared to the fronts, and could be resisting a lot of roll on the transition (but not in steady state cornering like a sway bar would). I have some KYB rears that I will try, to see what they do. I will also consider taking out the two polyurethane donut bushings under the axle and replace them with rubber: the stiffness of the poly in this location WILL affect the articulation of the axle. I will also remove the limiting straps, as they're no longer needed to keep the car from falling over and on transitions they might be stretching out and yanking a wheel off the ground, temporarily upsetting the car. We ran Dale's car without straps and it didn't explode, so I think I'll be fine.
For what it's worth, my best, worst, and average times were about 2 seconds slower than Craig's, but unlike at Streetwheelers it was on a 60+ second run so it seems like I'm catching up. I know that I was losing a TON of time on the two 270 degree pinwheels, I was loose on entry and very very tight on exit. I still couldn't power out of them either, so I know a limited slip would help and I might install one this winter too.
Again, the goals must be maintained: the car must handle well but must not be brutal or uncomfortable, and I'm not in it to win it, I just want to improve myself and my car.
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