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tube80z

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Everything posted by tube80z

  1. Have you looked at other ratios for the 8.8 that are not mustangs? "2.47 is 83-86 f150 and 2.26 is 79-81 ford Lincoln mercury passenger cars." I have not verified this but did see what looked like 2.47 gears for sale on a few sites.
  2. How is pulling a transmission with that setup? I know that may seem like a stupid comment but I also like to think about how hard it is to do basic maintenance items and changing the transmission clutch and pulling the motor are on my list. Cary
  3. Personally I think ARBs are just as useful to road racing as they are to autox. I know a lot of people like to argue that point but they are a tool help with setup. I can tell from my hillclimbing days that my car was easier/nicer to drive when using ARBs to balance the fast corners. You can spring the car stiff enough to not need them but if you don't have a really smooth course it will not put power down as well and the car will have a lot more of a snappy feel when loaded up and ride over bumps. In the end it's all down to how you like the car to feel and what makes you confident in how the car behaves. If you have no confidence and feel is crap it doesn't matter how fast XYZ driver is with a similar setup. What I learned about the splined bars is that you need to rate test them about 3 times before they will read the same. If a bar is used then it will probably do this. I bought some from Roush years ago that were supposed to be used and came in new packaging. You can rate test them on the car locking the other opposite side at level ride height and then handing weights from the spindle or weld a hook to an old steel wheel and bolt that on to simulate the best experience and then hang weights from a chain and use a laser level on the wall or piece of plywood or similar. Your just looking for what happens hole to hole. And you can run both sides in different holes to split the rate (most people forget this). The advantage to this method is you will know what the installed rate at the wheel is. That's what you need for all the spreadsheets that calculate wheel loads. You might as well make some droop limiters too while you are there. If you add a forward facing arm you can build a stop using a pivoting foot bolt (https://www.mcmaster.com/leveling-pads/). Or use the arm side and capture how far it can extend. Just make sure there's enough clearance for the wheel/tire combo. Hope that helps, Cary
  4. Don't forget ebay for these too. You can search for NASCAR sway bar and find lots of options. Ideally you test these as they often take a different rate after being used a few times. I wasn't aware of this until I saw it in a youtube video explaining how to use bars with bump rubbers. You can also look at some of the big race teams for used parts. Really high end stuff for pennies on the dollar.
  5. SuperDan has now fixed this. It was a problem with an expired certificate. Nothing malicious. Cary
  6. The one thing I would add is a pin in the middle. Unless you are doing a lot of work to close up the front end and exhaust the pressure. I have may pictures taken over the years with various Zs that have the center of the hood bulged up looking like a guppy. Love watching the progress, Cary
  7. I'd personally do plywood until you get the design all figured out. It's cheap and easy to work with. When you want to go all out you can route out big sections and use foam to fill them in. Then put some Kevlar on the bottom and some carbon or s-glass on the top and you'll have a very strong splitter. For the splitter frame make it adjustable and sprung so it can move up if the car gets too low. I see a lot of solid mounted splitters that people grind off. Done right you can make this a performance adjustment but that may get you in trouble with the rules. Leading edge treatment (flexible skirt or radius) depend a lot on what the rest of the car has going on underneath. If you have mostly a flat floor and not anything hanging down to act as a sail them you want air to go under the splitter. This helps to reduce pressure and leads to higher downforce numbers. If you don't have a flat floor or there's a lot of stuff to catch the air then you are better off blocking it off and using the edge like in Greg's pic above. Either way seal off as much as you can under the car and back to the wheel center line. And if you can exhaust the radiator into the fenders (assuming you can do hood vents) and add some s-flaps that are adjustable. Hope that helps, Cary
  8. You're welcome. I'm learning lots from your build too. Every time I build anything I always find a better way to build it and make it lighter next time. I love watching the progress. I still come to see what people are doing and what the latest things people have found on newer cars and to keep the Zs going better than ever. My latest find is the Bosch i-brake system. Electronic brake booster rather than needing any vacuum. More later on that. Keep up the good work, cary
  9. Unless there are some missing tubes a strut tower brace is still going to help. On my old car I had the cage tied in similar to this and did some push/pull testing using a hydraulic ram and found the towers would still move. It will be a lot less but they will still move. And I could tell when it wasn't attached, as the car seemed a little slower to respond. I don't know if historic or SCCA EP will let you do this but if you reinforce the top of the tower and connect it to the vertical you'll lose another area of movement. Another way would be to use a thicker camber plate top plot that's connected to your vertical tube. If you are going to use spacers for bumpsteer that are longer than an inch on the steering arrm, I'd recommend TIGing the largest spacer to the arm. As stupid as that sounds it makes a difference. If you bend the arm down then you probably don't need to worry about it. Cary
  10. Did you see this post is from 2015? Generally we try and leave old posts alone. Please note this topic has been discussed a lot in the aero section, in case you are curious.
  11. Thanks for sharing. That's pretty f'ing amazing at how fast that car is.
  12. I don't have the pictures anymore but my old 240Z race car also had this mod as I ran under GT-2 rules (first spark plug aligns with front axle centerline). Ideally you need a dry sump as the oil pump will end up being the part that keeps you from moving the engine down. If you look at a standard l-series install you can see that it wants to be in the same place as the rack and cross member when you move this far back. So while this gives a much better weight distribution (mine was slightly better but not much 47.8 front) the one thing not mentioned is this makes the car much faster at corner turn-in and gives you quick mid-corner rotation. I raced with 4 other Z cars at one time and we all had similar setups but my car was generally faster. The more corners the more this was so. And I could generally brake deeper than the other cars.
  13. Great to hear. I was going to ping Dan again but glad you are hooked up. Cary
  14. I just posted this to our admin forum. I think it will take intervention from SuperDan to fix. I also asked if there was a way to link old/new accounts for those of you that had to create new ones. Sorry for the inconvenience this is causing all of you. Almost all of my "admin" time is pruning spam from the threads hoping to keep the information ratio up. best, Cary
  15. And don't forget the custom mufflers or battery holds on each side of the cell that make a wall just like a diffuser. I'd personally 3D print or buy a faux batter top or send some fake wiring to it so that it looks legit. Maybe one could be a fuel cooler? Just spitballing ideas to make the cell closer to a diffuser.
  16. Make the fuel cell a diffuser. You can install it so that it's tipped toward the front. Or keep the cell you have and build a box that holds the pumps and lines. I've seen a few local GT-1 cars that had a setup very close to this. Definitely a grey area that may be called out.
  17. I think you should at least invest in a GoPro that can provide data and use the RaceTechnology software (https://www.race-technology.com/us/gopro) if the budget allows. Capturing data with video will help make you a better driver far more quickly than without. It also would be useful if you wanted to use a virtual coach. There are a lot of people doing this now and from what I've seen it can be super helpful. I also can't stress enough how important it is to have a racing notebook. You can use this to keep all your setup sheets, run sheets, etc. together, and plan out what setup changes to make. I'm also a big proponent of every time the car runs it has a change on it and for the last run I check against the baseline. This will show you if the track got better or worse and provide some additional context to any changes that may or may not have made improvements. The way I figure is you're running the car anyway so why not learn from it. Sorry for going way off topic in your thread. Cary
  18. It's internally regulated and physically smaller, in case that's of any help.
  19. My column is as Clark described, 3/4 DOM tubing held by separate rod ends (specially sized for 3/4 tube) and then I used the Woodward weld in splines and their u-joints for the weld in splines and a special Woodward u-joint for the rack. For the collapsing piece I used a Woodward part inside the car near the steering wheel. It has 5 to 7 inches of telescoping as I recall. My plan was to make a trick system that allowed you to pull a lever and move the steering wheel up and almost to the windshield rather than removing the wheel. It was an idea I had thought for driver changes watching friends race in Chumpcar. For the firewall I used one of the aftermarket 3/4 oversize bearings that mounts flat. I could move this over enough to get good pedal spacing. If you don't want to go to all this trouble you might be able to make a larger pad for your brake pedal to make heal and toe easier. Or you could do the same for the throttle. For data it doesn't matter the system but here's what you need at a minimum in my opinion. For car health you'd these as the most basic. 1. water temp & maybe pressure 2. oil temp & pressure 3. RPMs 4. lateral and longitudinal Gs 5. GPS coordinates 6. other basic things you want to measure (fuel pressure) The magic happens in the software. You can create match channels to view what happens to your fuel and oil pressure when you're in a turn over a certain amount of Gs. Or what happens when you brake hard. One of my favorites is to create match channels that measure the distance certain things happen. Say for instance how many feet have you driven against the rev limiter. What are the mileage of components when heavily stressed (brakes over a certain Gs threshold). You can map these out against a track map to see if there are certain areas where there are problems and plan on how to fix. You're probably thinking when am I going to have time to deal with all this data. That's where setting up the analysis package comes into play. I like to create a health report that is a channels measure screen. It records the highs and the lows. So for all those match channels above I set them to show either 0 or 1. The channels report can then be setup to show red for anything showing a 1. This could be low oil pressure but it only shows when you have a really long corner with heavy braking at the same time. My first 5 minutes involves clicking the health tab and seeing if there are any red or yellow items (all goes back to setup). These can cover all the basics so you only need a few gauges if you don't want to do a dash. You don't need voltage, current, fuel level, etc. as the datalogger is a better option. For understanding how you are driving I'd add the following the basics for car health. 1. Lateral and longitudinal Gs (can be GPS sourced if all else fails) 2. GPS for distance and track mapping. Most new systems can also be used to verify lines but ideally that's done by adding video. Race Technology is better here than AIM that want to use their expensive smarty cams. 3. steering 4. throttle 5. front and rear brake pressure sensors Like car health you can create match channels that measure how you are doing and put that into a channels report. And any package that's decent will have time slip (faster or slower vs. reference lap or same sectors). You can map these out on the track and tie to video to see what lines might be better or worse. But generally before you start worrying about this you can use a split times report to check for consistency. That along with seeing timeslip will help you get better as a driver really quickly. Then you add in how are you doing at heal and toe, or how good are you on the brakes, or releasing the brakes. You can also use the above channels to measure Ackerman steering and use this as a math channel to report over or understeer. You can map that out on a track, you can show it doe fast, medium, or slow corners. There's lots you can do. My advice use OEM sensors from a JY or buy new often for a ton less than what the data companies want to charge. In the end it's like anything else. All the details are in the preparation and that makes it much easier to consume the data at the track. I'm a big believer in Ross Bentley's review system for data. You have 5 minutes to check the big things (health KPIs), 15 to 30 minutes to see area where you can improve (or be more consistent), then you can spend a bunch more time between events looking for ideas of what to change to make you faster and more consitent. Sorry for the length, I love data and race cars Cary
  20. Look for a Kubota tractor alternator. Here's a link https://www.amazon.com/Alternator-100211-1670-16231-24011-16241-64010-16241-64011/dp/B00S6MW70A/ref=sr_1_5?dchild=1&keywords=kubota+alternator&qid=1628200900&sr=8-5 Cary
  21. I've done that in the past. I can tell you that going forward I'm not for the simple reason is you need to lug around another battery to hook to the car before and after runs. And forgetting to turn something off really screws up your day. I made a quick connect on the side of the car where I would drive off and the base battery connection would pull out. While that worked it left a battery hanging around where I was. Not a big deal if you have friends that will move it but if you're a one man show someplace that might be problematic. I like AIM products but hate their software. They are doing a massive upgrade to Race Studio, which is their analysis package. It addresses a lot of my comments. One reason they are successful is they are doing tons of training webinars and show up at major events. There aren't too many places where you can actually get emails from the software developer asking for specifics around something you found or don't like. That said, they are a lower tier player compared to the big boys but I don't think you'd run into any use case where at an amateur or starting out pro user would have a problem. There are other companies that have similar products that might be better or not. Race Technology is one, which I hear has great analysis software. AEM has some alternatives but I've not seen any in person. Personally I'd leave this to the last item on your list only because the market is always driving forward and you don't want to be tied down by older products. My AIM system is one of their first to support cars coming from carts. I got a killer deal on it and bought it. There are plenty of things it won't do but it has enough that I can still do a lot of work using match channels to find areas of improvement. One thing to keep in mind is if you are going to EFI that many aftermarket companies have dashes now and the EFI system will do a lot of the channels via CAN. So that's a must if you need to stay current. And there are some cool PDM solutions running around. Have you considered replacing the column with 3/4 DOM tubing and joints (Woodward, etc.)? I lost a surprising amount of weight when I did that. And I moved the column over to make my pedal spacing better on my new car. The old car uses the stock box modified to take a balance bar. Add a horizontal false floor that's level and a heel stop. I wished I would have done that earlier. I drove a friends car with this mod and it was nice and seemed easier to use. Hope that helps, Cary
  22. You need about 20 heaters added to your rig for realism of the cockpit
  23. You can heat them with a torch until they fall apart and remove some of the top ring. You can get about an inch doing this. Then you have to modify the metal body of the isolator but cutting the cup in various sections so you can fold it back over the shortened rubber isolator and then tack weld the folds. This was very common before the widespread adoption of camber plates. For a street car it's nice as you get some lowering but also it tightens the strut top so in cornering you don't lose as much camber. Think of it as halfway between stock and camber plates.
  24. Awesome job on the exhaust, well awesome job all around! Those headers were pretty common on all the tubeframe cars running hear in the northwest. They get very hot in the car so you'll want a lot of shielding. You might be able to vent some air from the cowl into the fabbed transmission tunnel to help cool it down.
  25. What are you looking for in this book? I have and have only went through it one time and now another. The author seems to either be an academic or someone who has no real experience with racing cars. Almost all the examples are trivial to explain some vehicle dynamics concept with a nice easy to solve formula. I think if you're totally new to FSAE this may be okay as a starter but even then I have a lot of reservations. The author often throws out some rule of thumb or says this would make a nice starting point. In FSAE you better have the knowledge of why and not say rule of thumb, etc. Where this book is okay is showing all the bits that go into a car and some of the basics you need to think about. When it comes to the most important chapters (testing) it's very thin on commentary and gives no guidance on keeping records, what's most important to do first, etc. One thing Claude Rouelle harps on is when you win or the car is working really well you need to understand why. This is the only way you can ever get it back into this window when it drops out. My opinion is that I don't think there's any one book that covers it all very well. For the era the Z was designed in two books stand out for me although they are feeling long in the tooth now. Those Racing and sports car design (Costin and Phips), the Race and Rally Car source book by Staniforth, Think Fast (Neil Roberts), and the Carrol Smith to Win series (at least get prepare to win). And then things get hot and heavy on my bookshelf. So it really depends on how far you want to take some of this stuff. Hope this helps, Cary
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