kaj
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Jason
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2022
- Threads
- 35
- Messages
- 2,138
- Reaction score
- 2,491
- Location
- Fresno, CA
- Car(s)
- '00 360 / '69 Charger
I use this since all of my hand tools are DeWalt. This runs off the cigarette lighter or a battery. I set the PSI and it runs to that pressure and stops. It even adds as extra 0.2 psi or so to compensate for air loss when you remove it lolWhat do you all use to air up at the track?
I’m considering buying a compressor but don’t want one that sucks.
Also, any suggestions for starting tire pressure for PS4S on track?
From what people who know better than I have told me, stiffer suspension helps with transitions but usually results is a reduction of overall grip.Relevant video with respect to set up and oversteer/understeer being down to driver preference:
It's true even at the highest levels of motorsport. Both can be fast.
My limited understanding is that, all else being equal and assuming you are not bottoming out, increasing roll stiffness of either axle should increase overall grip and responsiveness up to a point, but it also means that outside tire on that axle is doing more of the work and will be overloaded sooner. So if the car is oversteering too much and you add a slightly stiffer front bar, you could in theory make it more balanced and gain overall grip.
I think the issue a lot of people run into is that the aftermarket front sway bars are very stiff compared to stock and designed to be run with an equally stiff aftermarket rear sway bar. So if you just do the front, you could still in theory be quicker, but if you don't adjust your driving style to account for what may now be an understeer bias, you are just going to overheat your front tires, which will of course make you slower. If I were only going to do the front, I would look for the softest sway bar on the softest setting (which would still probably be noticeably stiffer than stock).
Most of us find a balance in how much overall grip we're willing to give up versus response of the car.
For me, I take a look at the tracks I run and determine how much steady-state grip I'm going to need, on average, versus transitioning.
Right now, my stock setup has worked really well together and I think, in my case, I would lose too much grip by swapping to a different sway bar.
I would obviously have to do back to back comparisons to see for sure, which I might do next year, once I have time to play around and the weather is better.
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