Funkjaw
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
2023 manual - stock power
My car has struggled with wheel hop since the day I got it. The wheel hop was so bad any amount of traction loss in 1st or 2nd gear the rear wheels would hop, violently at times.
I have done the following at an attempt to get rid of it, and each mod has helped to some degree
Powerflex engine mount insert - helped
Twisted tuning differential brace kit - helped, but not as much as I thought it would kinda disappointed in this one
Verkline rear toe arms - maybe helped
Verkline rear traction links - helped a good amount
Now the car is at a point where wheel hop will only happen under extreme traction loss. Say a very cold rainy day flooring it in 1st gear on bald tires. This is a substantial improvement from how it was... but it's still there
Before you say new tires, they are in the works! But also that's not really fixing the problem, more just avoiding it by providing better grip.
Anybody have luck solving wheel hop in their car? What would you suggest next? I've looked around on the forums but most people seem to be in my boat where they only reduced it but didn't get rid of it entirely.
Thx a ton
BIG EDIT:
I received a response from Verkline that provides an wealth of information on the issue. I am sharing it here in hopes it helps those battling wheel hop like myself:
"
Generally speaking, to decrease the wheel hop You can tune a lot of different factors:
1. Increase the stiffness and/or damping of drivetrain, suspension and chassis (uniballs, polyurethanes, solid bushings, chassis braces, coilovers damping and spring rates etc.)
2. Change the forces which are applied (alignment, tires, tire pressure),
3. Change the direction of movement (wheel path - anti squat) and/or forces (static alignment, bump steer, camber gain, elasto-kinematics)
I found and read Yours very good, constructive thread on the GR Supra forum regarding the wheel hop - https://www.supramkv.com/threads/wheel-hop-what-more-can-i-do.27820/. I believe that it would be best/easiest to find someone who will know the root cause of the wheel hop in Your supra to effectively eliminate it. I like the idea of setting a go pro to look at different components to find out which vibrates the most and in which direction. If the wheel is moving mainly vertically, the cause may be the tune of the dampers/springs (maybe manual supras have softer dampers/springs?). And if there is a lot of longitudinal movement of the knuckle, it may be good enough to increase the stiffness of the traction arms even more.
Unfortunately we do not know what is the cause that some cars suffer from significant wheel hop and some with similar setup don't. However, this shows that the root cause of the problem is probably not in the stiffness of the control arms. Stiffer arms and uniballs instead of rubber bushings will help for sure, but we can not guarantee that they will completely get rid of wheel hop.
In terms of mentioned anti-squat - You can increase it by increasing the length of the lower traction arm and/or by decreasing the length of the upper traction arm. The problem is that this way You will also change the bump steer in a significant way, so if You do not measure it, I recommend to set the length of traction arms to be the same as OEM. Generally speaking it would be also hard to significantly increase the anti-squat without messing up bump steer if You do not relocate the pickup points.
In terms of products which should help with wheel hop, we have two more besides lower traction arm (WAS-421) which You already have:
1. Rear Knuckle Bushings (WAS-426) - it replaces the rubber bushing with spherical bearing on the knuckle pickup point of lower traction arm. Assuming similar stiffness of both lower traction arm OEM bushings (knuckle and subframe pickup points), this product should give a similar upgrade in terms of wheel hop as WAS-421.
2. Upper Traction Arms (WAS-422) - I checked the forces calculations and during acceleration there are about 2 times higher loads on this arm in comparison to the forces acting on the lower traction arm. Also this OEM arm consists of rubber bushings on both sides, instead of 1 so I would expect that it should help with wheel hop roughly 4 times more than WAS-421.
In terms of direction of forces mentioned in the forum thread (picture in the attachment) - User @i3igpete would be right if we would consider the braking scenario or the acceleration with some engines mounted directly to the knuckles (outboard drivetrain). In our acceleration scenario (inboard drivetrain) we can apply longitudinal force in the wheel center instead of contact patch. Thanks to that we will take into account the torque coming to the wheels from the halfshafts. In reality, during acceleration, there will be the same direction of forces acting on both upper and lower traction arm (please see the picture in the attachment)."
My car has struggled with wheel hop since the day I got it. The wheel hop was so bad any amount of traction loss in 1st or 2nd gear the rear wheels would hop, violently at times.
I have done the following at an attempt to get rid of it, and each mod has helped to some degree
Powerflex engine mount insert - helped
Twisted tuning differential brace kit - helped, but not as much as I thought it would kinda disappointed in this one
Verkline rear toe arms - maybe helped
Verkline rear traction links - helped a good amount
Now the car is at a point where wheel hop will only happen under extreme traction loss. Say a very cold rainy day flooring it in 1st gear on bald tires. This is a substantial improvement from how it was... but it's still there
Before you say new tires, they are in the works! But also that's not really fixing the problem, more just avoiding it by providing better grip.
Anybody have luck solving wheel hop in their car? What would you suggest next? I've looked around on the forums but most people seem to be in my boat where they only reduced it but didn't get rid of it entirely.
Thx a ton
BIG EDIT:
I received a response from Verkline that provides an wealth of information on the issue. I am sharing it here in hopes it helps those battling wheel hop like myself:
"
Generally speaking, to decrease the wheel hop You can tune a lot of different factors:
1. Increase the stiffness and/or damping of drivetrain, suspension and chassis (uniballs, polyurethanes, solid bushings, chassis braces, coilovers damping and spring rates etc.)
2. Change the forces which are applied (alignment, tires, tire pressure),
3. Change the direction of movement (wheel path - anti squat) and/or forces (static alignment, bump steer, camber gain, elasto-kinematics)
I found and read Yours very good, constructive thread on the GR Supra forum regarding the wheel hop - https://www.supramkv.com/threads/wheel-hop-what-more-can-i-do.27820/. I believe that it would be best/easiest to find someone who will know the root cause of the wheel hop in Your supra to effectively eliminate it. I like the idea of setting a go pro to look at different components to find out which vibrates the most and in which direction. If the wheel is moving mainly vertically, the cause may be the tune of the dampers/springs (maybe manual supras have softer dampers/springs?). And if there is a lot of longitudinal movement of the knuckle, it may be good enough to increase the stiffness of the traction arms even more.
Unfortunately we do not know what is the cause that some cars suffer from significant wheel hop and some with similar setup don't. However, this shows that the root cause of the problem is probably not in the stiffness of the control arms. Stiffer arms and uniballs instead of rubber bushings will help for sure, but we can not guarantee that they will completely get rid of wheel hop.
In terms of mentioned anti-squat - You can increase it by increasing the length of the lower traction arm and/or by decreasing the length of the upper traction arm. The problem is that this way You will also change the bump steer in a significant way, so if You do not measure it, I recommend to set the length of traction arms to be the same as OEM. Generally speaking it would be also hard to significantly increase the anti-squat without messing up bump steer if You do not relocate the pickup points.
In terms of products which should help with wheel hop, we have two more besides lower traction arm (WAS-421) which You already have:
1. Rear Knuckle Bushings (WAS-426) - it replaces the rubber bushing with spherical bearing on the knuckle pickup point of lower traction arm. Assuming similar stiffness of both lower traction arm OEM bushings (knuckle and subframe pickup points), this product should give a similar upgrade in terms of wheel hop as WAS-421.
2. Upper Traction Arms (WAS-422) - I checked the forces calculations and during acceleration there are about 2 times higher loads on this arm in comparison to the forces acting on the lower traction arm. Also this OEM arm consists of rubber bushings on both sides, instead of 1 so I would expect that it should help with wheel hop roughly 4 times more than WAS-421.
In terms of direction of forces mentioned in the forum thread (picture in the attachment) - User @i3igpete would be right if we would consider the braking scenario or the acceleration with some engines mounted directly to the knuckles (outboard drivetrain). In our acceleration scenario (inboard drivetrain) we can apply longitudinal force in the wheel center instead of contact patch. Thanks to that we will take into account the torque coming to the wheels from the halfshafts. In reality, during acceleration, there will be the same direction of forces acting on both upper and lower traction arm (please see the picture in the attachment)."
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