This has got to be the post of the year. Trying to wrap your head around some of (Not some, ALL) the factors is just amazing. To guys that race all the time, or have done it for years it may seem easy.Charlie don't surf wrote:Where in the corner are you lacking on-power steering, entry or exit?
Lacking on entry is usually a instant weight transfer issue, because of damping/caster/tire. But that's only the norm, not the only item.
If you aren't transferring (and keeping) enough weight on the front end during initial turn-in(damping), the front end will rebound somewhere in the corner, changing the weight and decreasing the effective cornering. Too little (caster) keeps the tire too flat in the corner to be effective @ speed when the top of the tire tips out from lateral weight transition and imbalances the front to rear. Wrong tire or compound of course is what it is-
On a side note, your truck/car should roll through the corner (off power) at the rate of speed you expect it too, if you add power before that point, you shift the weight and alter the corner-
Lacking on exit is usually ride height/caster/front toe issue, But again- there are other factors that can make a big difference.
When accelerating out of a corner the front end unloads and goes "static" where no spring or oil forces are acting upon chassis weight (theoretically) so if you have too much (ride height) in the front you can lose any effective contact weight on the front end. Decreasing the ride height and "locking down" the front end reduces this. (Caster) too much caster jacks the front wheel beyond the effective scrub point. (Toe) in decreases the drag arc of the inside tire, and increases the turn radius. Sometimes adding 1-2* toe out makes the corners come alive-
On the T3 (as I recall) you can move the on-center king-pin up and down via shims between it and the caster block, this helps the truck have more aggressive steering characteristics, as the on-center pin really pushed the top of the tires out on the truck. 25* caster is also prob your best bet, 30's should be aggressive in, and dull on exit. The T3 also had a very laid down front shock option, far outside lower- inside upper, if you try this you have to raise the rear oil weight and decrease the front to balance it out. Overall, without knowing the track-tires-conditions-driving style etc (sounds like you have a pretty good handle on all that) I would bet it is a front or rear ride height issue-
Now...back to Calculus
I thoroughly enjoyed that post, and I might have said it about some other post in the first few months of this year... But I take it back. That is some fantastic insight. And my vote for post of the year!
Now to put some of this knowledge to use. As soon as I read the bit about ride height, it all clicked. Great advice!