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Cal-look/High Performance => Pure racing => Topic started by: Garrick Clark on December 31, 2017, 20:39:16 pm



Title: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on December 31, 2017, 20:39:16 pm
Hi Guys.
I have a 67 swing axle chassiis bug with a turbo type 4 motor.
Now the motor is running good its making the driving experience a bit scary.
I feel my suspension is set up wrong for fast street driving.
I'm looking for some advice on how to make this bug a better/safer drive on the street.
My suspension is like this.
2" narrowed beam
drop spindles.
the front wheels are set zero camber.
1 pair of caster shims
No front sway bar
standard shocks.
front is lower than rear.

Rear set up is
28 torsion bars.
Short rear axles
heavy duty spring plates.
rear wheels zero camber.
Standard shocks
145 front tyres
205-70 rear tyres.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: modnrod on January 01, 2018, 01:27:07 am
185/65r15 front, 205/65r15 rear, something decent. Wheels can be stock front if you want or 5.5s, 5.5s work on the rear or 6s.
Front sway bar, a little one. The clamp-on ones are better than nothing, but proper links work better.
Rear camber bar, just barely preloaded on the rubbers at rest. If your torsion bars are bigger than 28mm it will skip and bounce on the rear and not follow the road properly.
1mm-2mm front toe-in (what gives you the best confidence), with 1/2deg positive camber (bend stuff if needed), and only just enough castor to make it straight at 100mph.
No rear toe at all up to 1mm max (it'll be a bit twitchy, but progressive, set to your confidence), 1deg positive camber at rest (3/4deg on the road centre wheel if the road is heavily crowned).
Get the front down to match the rear height with 1/2 tank of fuel, preferably without reducing suspension tension or adding unsprung weight. The ride height is set by the rear suspension settings and your tyre height, if you want it lower then you need to find lightweight 14s and 205/55 Advans to start getting serious.  ;)
Don't reduce track width. Stick the rubber right out on the guard edges.
The best shocks you can afford. Double-acting gas are too stiff and will make the car bounce and skip, hydraulic are better for this.

Others will have their preference settings no doubt, but these settings are the ones I like to "potter about" in (with maybe a bit less toe-in).

Try it out, it might work for you too maybe.
Go beat up some Porsches......   ;D



Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 01, 2018, 11:35:01 am
Hey thanks modnrod, some good info there. looks like I've got a fair few adjustments to make. along with new tyres etc. Its looking like my 28 bars are causing a lot of the no confidence  feeling I'm having. Its does feel like its  bouncing on the tyres at the back. Its hard to tell what's going on while all my concentration is on the road.   


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: baz on January 01, 2018, 15:52:58 pm
Stock shocks are probably struggling to control the 28mm bars


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 01, 2018, 17:59:29 pm
I've got some KYB gas adjust shocks. Would putting them on help. There a lot stiffer than standard.
I adjusted the rear torsion bars today.Outer splines adjusted only.  Got rid of the rake. The bug is now sitting level. The exhaust is now a bit too close to the road.
. 3 inch clearance. Can't win can ya. I'll test drive it see if it improves stability. I think it probably will. If it does I'll have to re do the header.




Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: baz on January 01, 2018, 18:12:01 pm
I know when I bought my 28mm bars I was concerned about the ride skipping about at the back, I asked when I bought them and was reassured the konis I have would control the stiff bars.
Can't say if it works as I've yet to drive it   :-[


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 01, 2018, 19:16:45 pm
I adjusted the rear torsion bars today. Just the outer splines.
1 outer spline adjusted the height 2 inches, which is strange. As standard bars/plates adjust 1 inch up or down. I'm hoping to adjust the inners to lift the rear 1 inch. The bug does now sit level though. I put a spirit level on the sill to check it.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Richierich56 on January 01, 2018, 19:57:15 pm
Hey Garrick, check you've not got some toe-out at the rear. I've just adjusted mine up as the car felt pretty dangerous when you really got on it. The difference now is night and day


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 01, 2018, 21:04:19 pm
Richie. Can the toe out be checked at home. DIY style.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 01, 2018, 21:07:36 pm
I also noticed but gave no thought to it till now, the 3 bolt holes in the spring plate on one of the plates might possibly be in a different place to other one. It looks like the passenger axle fits further into the spring plate Cup.
Think I'll take off both plates, put them side by side and see if the bolt holes are a match.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Richierich56 on January 01, 2018, 22:37:11 pm
Richie. Can the toe out be checked at home. DIY style.

Yes - it can, i just use some string and straight edges though its probably not the most accurate method. Does it feel like the rear end of the car is trying to overtake the front end?


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 01, 2018, 22:58:20 pm
Yeah. Like it's trying to over take me.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Richierich56 on January 02, 2018, 00:01:13 am
Yeah. Like it's trying to over take me.

Yep - that's exactly what mine was doing - damn scary. I reckon you've got a good amount of toe-out at the rear for sure. Can you post a photo of how the rear wheel sits in the arch - taken from the side?


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 02, 2018, 17:54:32 pm
Well I'm hoping that the axle holes are drilled wrong in the plates.
The very end of the spring plate on the Nearside is flush with the axle flange . The off side spring plate is an 1/4" past the edge of the axle flange .
 When I lowered it yesterday the adjustment slots aren't that big really.
Once the bolts are in place there isn't much forward/backward  adjustment. After lowering it I just positioned the axles in the same place it was prior to lowering. Its probably been wrong since I bought it.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 02, 2018, 17:55:35 pm
double post


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 02, 2018, 17:56:36 pm
.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: baz on January 02, 2018, 19:03:04 pm
You should be able to measure wheelbase each side, if it's a quarter inch out it will show up easily.

Going back to the torsion bars, there's a chart somewhere that shows the spring rate increases with each step up in diameter. 28mm bars have something like 3 times the rate of 22mm bars. You couldn't expect a stock shock to keep that under control.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Martin S. on January 02, 2018, 19:04:45 pm
Lanner told me to set the axles all the way back for a regular set up and to grind even more for a lowered car to get some toe-out at the rear.
Then I went to an alignment shop and had the front toe in adjusted. They will give you a measurement of the rear toe so you can check if it is even with that.
I did those changes, and as well added Koni's all the way around, plus a Koni steering damper and it made the car much more stable at speed.
I still don't like the slight bouncing feeling in the rear end that comes with big heavy tires, in combination of the insanely heavy cheap disk brake kit I put on.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 03, 2018, 18:56:30 pm
Just taken the spring plates off,I have them side by side and the bolt holes are nowhere near square.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Richierich56 on January 03, 2018, 20:44:36 pm
Just taken the spring plates off,I have them side by side and the bolt holes are nowhere near square.

As in the plates are different lengths? Pics?


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Martin S. on January 04, 2018, 18:29:21 pm
How are you guys checking the rear toe? String method?  ???


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Martin S. on January 04, 2018, 18:38:58 pm
After messing around with the string the ONLY method I trust now is the alignment shop.
Here is my report after pushing the axles all the way back on my 68 long axle bug.
Note that the right is 1/16" and the left is 1/32" (close to zero) toe out.
Ideally I should grind some on the left and get the 1/16" toe out to match the right.

The operator adjusted my front end perfectly!


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 05, 2018, 17:36:45 pm
Sorry Guys.
I'M  not good at putting pics up on web sites.
What i have done today is grind out the bolt slots in the plates so both plates match. (They didn't before).Passenger plate was WAY OUT/ must of been toeing in on passenger wheel making it feel unstable at speed.
Refitted them and pulled them right back .Now the wheels should be in  the SAME position, maybe not to what the book says  but i now at least have enough adjustment to play with.
I set the rear wheels with a bit of neg camber.
32 psi on the rear tires
Fitted the white gas adjust rear shocks
hopefully i should now have rear end running in a straight line.
Thanks for the input guys.

Front end next.
Double caster shims.
And  add  some camber.
Currently there isn't any camber at all.
 I do have the extra adjustment eccentric nuts fitted allready.
I'll try 3 degees camber  and an 1/8" toe in and see how it goes.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Martin S. on January 05, 2018, 17:49:45 pm
If you're a risk taker, try the string method. Basically run the string from front to back and pull it tight and see how the front and rear of the wheel compare to each other.
This is shade tree and I would NOT trust it unless you don't value your life much (YOLO).
3 degrees camber at the front eh? That sounds like what autocrossers would like. If you look at mine it is very near zero which is factory spec.
The rear on a SA car is the most important to get right. Gene Berg has a good blue book article on it. When he got the rear toe where he liked it, he made a piece of metal that went from the rear of the door frame to the axle tip so it could be re-set easily anytime. Cool idea.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: leec on January 05, 2018, 18:20:36 pm
I have my oval professionally aligned. For sake of £50 I wouldn't bother trying to do it with string etc.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Martin S. on January 05, 2018, 18:30:17 pm
Cool. Can you share your car's alignment spec sheet?


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Neil Davies on January 05, 2018, 19:12:44 pm
I have my oval professionally aligned. For sake of £50 I wouldn't bother trying to do it with string etc.


I had my car aligned when it was first restored in 1999, but it's not been done since. I do have my own alignment gauge tho, so I could (and probably should) do it myself.

Garrick, I'd leave the front (other than alignment) until the back is right. You don't want to change too much at once.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 05, 2018, 19:53:13 pm
I'll leave the front alone for now.
I will try the string way tomorrow just to see if I DO have the rears at least as straight and equal as possible . then pay some cash to get some suspension geometry numbers.
 


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: leec on January 05, 2018, 20:10:02 pm
Cool. Can you share your car's alignment spec sheet?

Will do, if I can find it. House moves are always good for hiding paperwork.
Lee


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Martin S. on January 05, 2018, 20:54:41 pm
That's why I take a pic as soon as I can. I use Apple Photos app and set up the tags so each pic relating to my car hobby has a tag of which car it pertains to. Then, when I hit search for 'white 68', I see only the pics of that car. Makes it easy to find the pic I want.
This is what we have plenty of time to do in Canada when it is 30 below outside ;)


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 07, 2018, 22:09:30 pm
Hi. I've finished with the rear end for now. Gotta get it checked at a shop. Today I had a go at the front end. I've got the bug sitting slightly higher at the front than the rear. From what I've
been reading this is ideal for a street car. I've got the camber set straight up. And have the toe in set at 1/8. I just measured  the width from the passenger  centre tyre treads to the driver side centre tread, then did the same at the back of the front tyres. Easy really.
Heres the thing.
Do I need a 3/4 Sway at the front on a 2" narrowed stock height beam with standard front shocks or will a modified to fit standard one be ok


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: spanners on January 13, 2018, 22:42:06 pm
Garrick, first, you have a lot of power, second, its gonna take some controlling on the street, if you are REALLY gonna push it on the street your on the limit of staying on the road  setup as it is its an oversteerer, a big oversteerer. its very close to circuit swing axle set up torsion bar wise at the rear, its very stiff rear and very soft at the front, hence its trying to swop ends at each twitch on the steering. i know most posters here are drag orientated, assuming you are too means compromises, im not a drag racer but know Beetle dynamics and what happens when changing chassis set up, ie, track use, to balance those big rear torsions you need around a 19 or 20mm front ARB, that will stop oversteer in roll, trouble is this is just baggage on a drag strip  ;) weight.. then as others mentioned, decent shocks at both ends, front too needs stiffer shocks, adjustable preferably if your gonna strip run it and need it soft, i alsays set half setting range front and rear and go driving and learn whats needed, the rear tells you its too soft as it will bunny hop after deflection, again, start at half hard and go from there. your tyre sizes aint gonna corner brilliantly, nor is a narrowed front axle, but we have what we have, i run fronts on track harder than rears, race is around 30\32 front, 28\30 rear, i guess yours would run around 20 in the wee fronts 30 in rear, almost stock, the bigger the tyre the lower the pressure it can run, eg, huge  F1 tyres around 15 psi, books are written on VW handling and you have things to try already, but the very best swing axle handling rule is STIFF, LOW and WIDE, do get a BIG front ARB and go from there..
 one contradiction is a laugh, if you make IRS rear as stiff as your swingaxle, like short 28 mm torsions, it will corner like drift car side ways everywhere, biggest IRS bars would be long 26mm x 26- 3\4".. i find 24mm work best and control them with shock settings. dont know what shocks you can get but protech work extremely well. toe settings are around
half deg toe in front and rear.  ;)



Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on January 14, 2018, 11:06:45 am
Thanks for the info Spanners much appreciated , I'm understanding the balance side of things now, no good with a stiff rear and soft front,  I'll get the bar next week. As you say that will make the front and the rear stiff and balance it out more on the bends. Once I have this fitted there's not much else I can do with it is there. I cant get rid of the  rear 70 series tyres as the exhaust manifold will be less than 4 " off the road. I think with all I've done it should be a lot safer at speed. 

Regards G.c


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: spanners on January 14, 2018, 20:53:11 pm
Well you can always do more lol, one good thing is the narrowish axle has stiffened the front somewhat because of the shorter leaves, so no bad thing there, you may be able to bring the front wheels out to fill the wing  aperture with spacers, depends on the wheel et, i see you run dropped spindles so more track width help there, worst case senario if its still tail happy would be to soften the rear back to softer torsions, a camber bar or preferably a proper z bar works ok with stock torsions but does nothing with bigger torsions 26mm and up, my challenge cup car used 30mm torsions and no rear bar, but i would brand them race only and very stiff on the street. the rear down theory works to a point, what it realy does is to add caster, it gained popularity as a theory when the the 411\412 and super beetle appeared to be set up thus, but with those it was done for full load luggage carrying ability with their huge front boot or trunk to you gents, but once you get the car really sorted and going proper quick, you will look at aero and you dont want air getting under it at 120 mph into a turn, so despite rumour and several popular writers and publications the cal look guys got it right, slightly front down but lower than they set them, they also run double caster shims, but key is one change at a time, then test.. remember IRS will always need softer rear torsions, you would think they would tolerate huge bars being a more modern design, but as i said, t`aint so.  have fun and good luck with it.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Martin S. on January 18, 2018, 18:43:39 pm
And have the toe in set at 1/8. I just measured  the width from the passenger  centre tyre treads to the driver side centre tread, then did the same at the back of the front tyres. Easy really.

I was wondering about 1/8 toe in. The spec is 1/16 total (1/32 per side). Does 1/8 toe in help with handling? What is the difference with more vs. stock spec?


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: JeeWee on January 19, 2018, 21:26:24 pm
And have the toe in set at 1/8. I just measured  the width from the passenger  centre tyre treads to the driver side centre tread, then did the same at the back of the front tyres. Easy really.

I was wondering about 1/8 toe in. The spec is 1/16 total (1/32 per side). Does 1/8 toe in help with handling? What is the difference with more vs. stock spec?

who is making the specs? a bit more toe in will help in better response in steering.
@Martin, why do you have your front toe in right set to 0?


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Martin S. on January 19, 2018, 21:59:11 pm
The specs were in the alignment computer at the shop I went to.
I didn't align it myself, so I can't say why I have zero on the right and 1/32 on the left.
If I had to guess, the operator maybe thought that 1/32 and zero were almost the same thing (.030" is pretty small) but I have no idea.
It does drive nicely as is, so you are saying it would be more responsive with more toe-in?
Interesting, although I'm not sure I would like it more responsive. ???


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: spanners on January 20, 2018, 20:21:05 pm
Front toe depends on the cars agenda, but in the real world there's rarely any time or reason to change from what you are regularly running. i would run parallel on fast airfield tracks but 1/16 on tight tracks, the only thing i avoid on my VERY stiff front b/j axle is toe out as it tram lines and feels un predictable braking hard into bumpy turns and most are exactly that.
small differences side to side dont matter as it centres anyway, to be picky, there is a centre register on the 'box which is useful for setting up, i carry a track rod assembly with Pittman arm pre set ready at 1/16" to bolt in in the event of bent steering, but 1/8th is ok and would be good in winter races as we have trouble warming the front tyres, i would run parallel for drags only  looking for minimum rolling risistance🤔.
             


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: mac68 on January 21, 2018, 00:36:06 am
I run toe out on my track only k@L swing axle. Yes its a bit squirmy under brakes but turn in is awesome!


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on February 09, 2018, 18:39:27 pm
Hi Chaps.
I'm back doing some work on this bug.
Went out in it today for 1st time since the changes.
The Last change was actually a 3/4 front sway bar. I No some people say don't do it as there too big, but I didn't get any bad vibes from having it fitted. The rear on the other hand does feel dodgy.

These 205 x70 tyres I'm using. I have them at 30 psi. The side wall isn't very stiff to me , they do wobble about. Is this the right tyre pressure.

P.S   I need the 70 series to gain some height in the rear end to stop the exhaust being low.
I'm driving along, no torque, boost comes in, full torque after a couple of seconds then what feels like rear end wobble.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Neil Davies on February 09, 2018, 19:46:21 pm
First try dropping the pressures a little. I've always run around 26psi, no matter what the tyre size. 30 might feel a bit squirrelly. If that doesn't work, maybe try a different brand of tyre? What are they at the moment?


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on February 09, 2018, 20:31:53 pm
Hi Neil.
I'll have a look at the make.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on February 11, 2018, 11:32:16 am
Got it better today.
Put more camber in the front end.
Passenger side has more camber than the driver side.
I'll have to take a bit of camber out of the passenger side to get both front wheels to match camber wise .
Re tracked the front again.
Upped the tyre pressure.
Got rid of a bit of steering box play.
I'm 3/16ths toeing in at the back.
I don't think its symmetrical at the back I'll have to get a shop to check it.
So progress has been made. It feels better at speed now.
Not easy is it. A tweak here and there makes these bugs drive from good to bad and vise versa. 


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on February 11, 2018, 17:03:57 pm
.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: spanners on February 12, 2018, 16:06:30 pm
The most common handling/suspension set up problem i see in the shop is bump steer, especially on k&l cars that dont have a register for the steering box location, no amount of cash spent on high end suspension parts will compensate for a car with bump steer, it feels like the rear is wayward especialy over undulating roads and always worse the faster you go, properly set up, if should run straight and true so maybe thats your problem Garrick..


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Martin S. on March 28, 2018, 23:31:38 pm

I'm 3/16ths toeing in at the back.
I don't think its symmetrical at the back I'll have to get a shop to check it.


Did you find toe-in at the rear was helping? I found the opposite. When I pulled the axles back all the way (toe out) it drove much nicer with more stability in the wind, or bumps.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on March 29, 2018, 21:04:11 pm
Hi Martin.
I've not altered the rear since I last tweak it. Bad weather stopped me driving it.
I've a new box to fit now.
I'll fit that then get a good tyre shop to get the symmetry right then add a 1/16 of toe in.
My other rear end mod is a camber compensator, from what I've read its a must have on a swing axle.
Regards.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Martin S. on March 29, 2018, 21:24:26 pm
I was thinking about that too, although I still have the original 68 Z-bar so I'm not sure how well they work together?
One thing I would like less of is the feel of a bounce in the rear suspension over the bumps which the Koni's helped the most.

A couple things I found out after fitting a new box:
Make sure you have a reinforced cross shaft for the clutch! Also get a heavy duty rear transmission carrier and the grey HD rubber mounts. Also add a frame horn rear engine brace to keep the frame horns from bouncing.
Next on the updates for mine are the carrier and the frame horn kit as I feel the engine bouncing slightly over sharp bumps at speed.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on March 30, 2018, 10:48:04 am
Nice 1 Martin.

I was told that if you fit the camber compensator either the CB one or the Empi one that you need to remove the original Z bar from the vehicle. The kit's that fits to the axles like the CB/Empi ones do stop that rear wheel bounce/tuck effect when going over uneven roads at speed. They say its a no brainer add on part for a swing axle .


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: H67bug on March 30, 2018, 21:04:51 pm
Hi- haven’t read all posts... do you have flop stops fitted to prevent the car lifting too high after a hard launch? It prevents most of what you talk about

Basically it’s a bolt in the spring plate, welded up, against the casting of the tubes


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Garrick Clark on April 02, 2018, 15:17:28 pm
I did have some of them fitted but as the back went positive camber the bolts used to hit the spring plate ledge with a knocking noise. that got a bit irritating so I removed them.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: Neil Davies on April 02, 2018, 16:52:40 pm
I had flop stops on my race car, and they worked fine. However, I remember being told not to run them (or limit straps) on the street as they stop the rear suspension from unloading in a controlled way - instead the wheel travel just stops abruptly  and the back of the car can become airborne.


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: leec on April 02, 2018, 19:03:14 pm
I wouldn't drive a swing axle bug with 100bhp or more power without the spring plate mod. It transformed how both of my beetles drove, particularly coming of hard acceleration

Lee


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: andy198712 on April 03, 2018, 11:37:30 am
when i was being followed in my bug and pressing on, i was told when i braked the car would get some decent positive camber.... and it felt scrary too, very unsettled.... think i need to refit my camber comparator and will have to DIY some flop stops as one of mine went missing :(


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: leec on April 03, 2018, 13:24:09 pm
If you are getting lift at the rear when you come off the power it doesn't matter how good your alignment is (was) as the height change will throw it all out


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: andy198712 on April 03, 2018, 13:58:30 pm
totally agree


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: spanners on April 06, 2018, 23:17:11 pm
The rear suspension toes out on throttle lift off, drag cars have soft front ends so the problem is amplified with front dive, i see drag guys lift off and and de clutch into neutral at high speed and the car loses control...
circuit cars are very stiff up front to combat dive and pitch and lift of oversteer..
 dont wast money on camber compensators on cars with big rear torsions, they do naff all.m


Title: Re: Street suspension.(Swing axle)
Post by: j-dub on April 10, 2018, 03:47:31 am
I wouldn't drive a swing axle bug with 100bhp or more power without the spring plate mod. It transformed how both of my beetles drove, particularly coming of hard acceleration

Lee

Lee,
By spring plate mod are you meaning a way to limit the movement of the spring plate such as the flop stop or limiting straps?

are you referencing this thread?
http://cal-look.no/lounge/index.php?topic=25484.0

Thanks in advance,
Jeremy