karkai6 wrote:Thanks a lot...By the way, U know any website that contains tips for racing on circuits and tuning ur cars for that?
* Maybe you will find Chris's Shock Shop interesting. He wrote the "Shocking Thoughts" you will find
here.
He partially disagrees with Dave about the usability of knobs for adjusting dampers. I agree with him: you have to dismantle the dam* thing and change shims or adjust the bleed valve. Then, inspired by engineering muse (that I guess must be
Polihymnia), you can do some "knob" adjustments that sometimes the pilot does not even feel. The reason is that for the knob to work you need a super stiff damper (no pun intended!).
Chris is proud dealer of Bill Mitchell's "Racing by the numbers" programs. You could find WinGeo useful, but it will settle you down by U$400. This gave my first opportunity to use my wrenchs and my laptop at the same time: with this (and I am not making this up) you can entertain a paddock full of mechanics for half an hour, during testing! It is like closing Maranello... muahahahaha!
* Penske has
a site and I recommend to read there
this guide, that includes the "basic setting". There you can take a look to shims, bleed valves and the guts of them. They have the series 7000 for ovals, but it is the same thing, only different.
* You will need a simulation program. I have used LapSim for the glory of our team and the confussion of the opposition (the morons I coach will tell you the opposite). Besides, you can use
two laptops! And one is connected to the car! Imagine the possibilities... You will need to buy the basic card, but this will be the single most important tool you will use. Check
Bosch site and delve into "Publications and software". You can download it for free. For the interested, this is a
nice pdf article on this software, interesting if only by having the most horrible scanning technique I have ever seen.
* With
f1perviewyou can get the raf files you will get from LapSim and convert them to nice little circuits that will be the coolest thing ever on the track...
* Finally, you can check my world famous (10 hits a day and counting...)
car simulation page, soon to be updated, for other software packages (soon means in the next two years or so).
A word of advice or a point to argue: I believed dampers were
the suspension and springs were only for support. Now I got that both work together, but you have to simulate a lot. Also, you could discover that understeer and the such are affected by dampers, but you correct this things with other adjustments. Dampers are to keep the patch on the road when you vary the load (hey! it has a nice ring!), not to correct other problems and even less to correct basic design flaws, the sort that requires welding of the chassis or refitting the engine position.