Suspension Considerations 245 Maxxis
#1
Suspension Considerations 245 Maxxis
My son almost has enough money for a 949 big grip kit.
Street tires will be 245/15 Maxxis. Hp will be 350ish with more on tap....Dialed down to Much less at the track!
As my son's driving ability grows we plan on adding Hoosiers at the track....No size considerations on that yet...Probably 245s
This is a Sunday sports car/ track car...Performance first!
This is not primarily a street car, but we prefer a car that feels like it knocks your fillings out over every bump.
Cake and eat it too so to speak!
700/400 Street: This seems a little soft for our tires and track goals? Thoughts?
800/400 Autocross: I don't really understand this setup? Loose for right foot rear end control? Doesn't seem a good place for us?
800/500 Race: This is what my son is leaning toward. My first instinct is that this setup will be overly rough on the street and a good choice for the track.
Given our horsepower objectives do we give up much rear wheel traction with this setup? A few here have run this setup on the street with seemingly no complaints?
Any thoughts here would be appreciated!
Cheers,
Jamie
Street tires will be 245/15 Maxxis. Hp will be 350ish with more on tap....Dialed down to Much less at the track!
As my son's driving ability grows we plan on adding Hoosiers at the track....No size considerations on that yet...Probably 245s
This is a Sunday sports car/ track car...Performance first!
This is not primarily a street car, but we prefer a car that feels like it knocks your fillings out over every bump.
Cake and eat it too so to speak!
700/400 Street: This seems a little soft for our tires and track goals? Thoughts?
800/400 Autocross: I don't really understand this setup? Loose for right foot rear end control? Doesn't seem a good place for us?
800/500 Race: This is what my son is leaning toward. My first instinct is that this setup will be overly rough on the street and a good choice for the track.
Given our horsepower objectives do we give up much rear wheel traction with this setup? A few here have run this setup on the street with seemingly no complaints?
Any thoughts here would be appreciated!
Cheers,
Jamie
#3
Junior Member
iTrader: (1)
Join Date: Jun 2014
Location: Toronto, ON, Canada
Posts: 133
Total Cats: -7
Sorry for the thread jack but I have a somewhat relevant question. How is the 800/500 over bumpy sections on the track? I'm guessing with good shocks it shouldn't feel rough or upset the car?
#4
I have the 800/500 coaxial XIDA setup. It DEFINITELY can knock your fillings at the upper shock dampening clicks, and stiff sidewall tires. At full soft with stiff sidewalls it is bareable to drive, and you can feel the bumps easily, but they are not annoying enough to deter long trips. Full(or close to it) hard with stiff sidewalls, is uh, not adviseable on the street if you have lots of pits, cracks, and undulations. (In my opinion) It gets me sick pretty easily unless the road is smooth. Very bumpy, and actually took away from my driving confidence in a corner that wasn't smooth. I could take the same corners MUCH faster on blown oem shocks, just because the car didn't buck and bounce around.
I am currently driving on 185/60/15 (i think) snow tires, lots of sidewall, and very squishy at that. On full soft the ride is very similar to "oem blown shocks" feel, if that makes sense.
definitely dont get anything softer than 800/500, but make sure you get the billet coaxial mounts.
I am currently driving on 185/60/15 (i think) snow tires, lots of sidewall, and very squishy at that. On full soft the ride is very similar to "oem blown shocks" feel, if that makes sense.
definitely dont get anything softer than 800/500, but make sure you get the billet coaxial mounts.
#6
I have the 800/500 coaxial XIDA setup. It DEFINITELY can knock your fillings at the upper shock dampening clicks, and stiff sidewall tires. At full soft with stiff sidewalls it is bareable to drive, and you can feel the bumps easily, but they are not annoying enough to deter long trips. Full(or close to it) hard with stiff sidewalls, is uh, not adviseable on the street if you have lots of pits, cracks, and undulations. (In my opinion)
I am currently driving on 185/60/15 (i think) snow tires, lots of sidewall, and very squishy at that. On full soft the ride is very similar to "oem blown shocks" feel, if that makes sense.
definitely dont get anything softer than 800/500, but make sure you get the billet coaxial mounts.
I am currently driving on 185/60/15 (i think) snow tires, lots of sidewall, and very squishy at that. On full soft the ride is very similar to "oem blown shocks" feel, if that makes sense.
definitely dont get anything softer than 800/500, but make sure you get the billet coaxial mounts.
The blown squishy feel seems familiar!
Nice to know there is a setting if he wants to drive the car on an extended run!
I was planning on the coax mounts, 1.125 front sway, end links, rear sway (may leave it off depending on how it feels), extended ball joints, and perhaps the bushings that come with the 949 kit.
Also looking at other (Sadfab) bushings...not sure the best way to go there yet.
Thanks for chiming in!
Jamie
#7
I would hold off on bushings until you can front the cost of the full sadfab delrin bushing kit. They also come with grease fittings. Do it once and do it right. I have the delrin setup, but I didn't drive my car for a few months as I was getting other things installed, so I can't really speak of the singular difference they made. (Other than all the suspension arms move around with almost zero effort.)
I might be wrong, but the extended ball joints can help with tire fitment, as they push the bottom of the tire out. I guess depending on your camber, they could also hurt clearance, if you didnt have enough camber.
I was able to get -3.4f/-2.8r camber without the ext. ball joints
I might be wrong, but the extended ball joints can help with tire fitment, as they push the bottom of the tire out. I guess depending on your camber, they could also hurt clearance, if you didnt have enough camber.
I was able to get -3.4f/-2.8r camber without the ext. ball joints
#8
"And now for something completely different"
I'm running 15x9 Advanti S1's with the 245 VR-1's. I've got 700/400 springs on Xida Gen2's (stock NB1 mounts, not billet) with a RB hollow bar in the front and no rear bar. The car is my DD but does autocross and limited track days. The front LBJ's are stock, but I do have RUCA's that are adjustable, so I can get as much camber in the rear as I need. I typically use as close to the 949 alignment as I can get. Also, my car is a 250-ish WHP car - so I'm down on power from your goals - but it's no slouch.
With the softer springs and with the Xida's on full-soft, the around-town behavior is pretty acceptable (not OE-plush, but not teeth rattling). At the autocross, the car is predictable and controllable (just a hint of lift off oversteer) - probably because I'm used to it more than anything. I've had others drive the car, and everyone has commented on how stable it was.
On the track I think I'm over-tired for the power I have on tap, and under-sprung for really aggressive driving. Someone with more skill than I would probably make disparaging comments ("tail-happy", "sluggish", etc), but I can manage not to embarrass myself, and can even stay with the "Big Boys" on-track.
I'm running 15x9 Advanti S1's with the 245 VR-1's. I've got 700/400 springs on Xida Gen2's (stock NB1 mounts, not billet) with a RB hollow bar in the front and no rear bar. The car is my DD but does autocross and limited track days. The front LBJ's are stock, but I do have RUCA's that are adjustable, so I can get as much camber in the rear as I need. I typically use as close to the 949 alignment as I can get. Also, my car is a 250-ish WHP car - so I'm down on power from your goals - but it's no slouch.
With the softer springs and with the Xida's on full-soft, the around-town behavior is pretty acceptable (not OE-plush, but not teeth rattling). At the autocross, the car is predictable and controllable (just a hint of lift off oversteer) - probably because I'm used to it more than anything. I've had others drive the car, and everyone has commented on how stable it was.
On the track I think I'm over-tired for the power I have on tap, and under-sprung for really aggressive driving. Someone with more skill than I would probably make disparaging comments ("tail-happy", "sluggish", etc), but I can manage not to embarrass myself, and can even stay with the "Big Boys" on-track.
#9
I have the 800/500 coaxial XIDA setup. It DEFINITELY can knock your fillings at the upper shock dampening clicks, and stiff sidewall tires. At full soft with stiff sidewalls it is bareable to drive, and you can feel the bumps easily, but they are not annoying enough to deter long trips. Full(or close to it) hard with stiff sidewalls, is uh, not adviseable on the street if you have lots of pits, cracks, and undulations. (In my opinion) It gets me sick pretty easily unless the road is smooth. Very bumpy, and actually took away from my driving confidence in a corner that wasn't smooth. I could take the same corners MUCH faster on blown oem shocks, just because the car didn't buck and bounce around.
I am currently driving on 185/60/15 (i think) snow tires, lots of sidewall, and very squishy at that. On full soft the ride is very similar to "oem blown shocks" feel, if that makes sense.
definitely dont get anything softer than 800/500, but make sure you get the billet coaxial mounts.
I am currently driving on 185/60/15 (i think) snow tires, lots of sidewall, and very squishy at that. On full soft the ride is very similar to "oem blown shocks" feel, if that makes sense.
definitely dont get anything softer than 800/500, but make sure you get the billet coaxial mounts.
__________________
#11
Friction reduction and that is a big deal. For more detailed info visit our website. There are links on the page to some more detailed Forum posts. But the most important is the picture of the shock which shows the mount on a different axis than the shock. There is no binding when the you have a bearing in there. With rubber bushings there is binding.
__________________
#13
I would hold off on bushings until you can front the cost of the full sadfab delrin bushing kit. They also come with grease fittings. Do it once and do it right. I have the delrin setup, but I didn't drive my car for a few months as I was getting other things installed, so I can't really speak of the singular difference they made. (Other than all the suspension arms move around with almost zero effort.)
I might be wrong, but the extended ball joints can help with tire fitment, as they push the bottom of the tire out. I guess depending on your camber, they could also hurt clearance, if you didnt have enough camber.
I was able to get -3.4f/-2.8r camber without the ext. ball joints
I might be wrong, but the extended ball joints can help with tire fitment, as they push the bottom of the tire out. I guess depending on your camber, they could also hurt clearance, if you didnt have enough camber.
I was able to get -3.4f/-2.8r camber without the ext. ball joints
I think we are going to order the complete kit from 949 and leave the poly bushings off until he can afford the Sadfab bronze bushings.
We are adding so many other things that will add NVH....Poly with the Sadfab seems like a reasonable balance.
The car needs to go in for a basic alignment....I will get it checked out to see how much is on tap.
Jamie
#16
Switched to Xida gen 2 approx November last year. 800/500.
Initially they were firm as all hell and I wondered if i'd made a mistake...I'm not sure on the realities of them "bedding in" but it sure felt like it. We actually got airborne on turn 1 bumps at pukekohe on the first 2 sessions after installation, things settled down after that.
They are now extremely comfortable on the road even at higher settings and fantastic on track. I recently ran an engine in via a 3 hour drive to our dyno tuners and had no comfort issues whatsoever.
Having never run that high a spring rate before (previously 10kg fr and 6/7 rear on on custom valved Koni Race) I was very concerned but it turns out to be a very good match to my 15 x9 Hankook ventus z214 and nitto NT01 semi slicks (Emilio knows what he's talking about.... who knew? )
In fact when I put the splitter/wing aero on it isn't enough. Even without aero and as I get faster again (lap times have been tumbling lately) could probably go up myself........Emilio can probably confirm or or not but if your running 10's with hoosiers you may want to go up 1 in the springs....especially if your prioritising track over street.
I also run Extended Ball joints and heavy front swaybar (24mm i think).
Initially they were firm as all hell and I wondered if i'd made a mistake...I'm not sure on the realities of them "bedding in" but it sure felt like it. We actually got airborne on turn 1 bumps at pukekohe on the first 2 sessions after installation, things settled down after that.
They are now extremely comfortable on the road even at higher settings and fantastic on track. I recently ran an engine in via a 3 hour drive to our dyno tuners and had no comfort issues whatsoever.
Having never run that high a spring rate before (previously 10kg fr and 6/7 rear on on custom valved Koni Race) I was very concerned but it turns out to be a very good match to my 15 x9 Hankook ventus z214 and nitto NT01 semi slicks (Emilio knows what he's talking about.... who knew? )
In fact when I put the splitter/wing aero on it isn't enough. Even without aero and as I get faster again (lap times have been tumbling lately) could probably go up myself........Emilio can probably confirm or or not but if your running 10's with hoosiers you may want to go up 1 in the springs....especially if your prioritising track over street.
I also run Extended Ball joints and heavy front swaybar (24mm i think).
Last edited by mx5-kiwi; 02-22-2017 at 05:43 PM.
#18
Switched to Xida gen 2 approx November last year. 800/500.
Initially they were firm as all hell and I wondered if i'd made a mistake...I'm not sure on the realities of them "bedding in" but it sure felt like it. We actually got airborne on turn 1 bumps at pukekohe on the first 2 sessions after installation, things settled down after that.
They are now extremely comfortable on the road even at higher settings and fantastic on track. I recently ran an engine in via a 3 hour drive to our dyno tuners and had no comfort issues whatsoever.
Having never run that high a spring rate before (previously 10kg fr and 6/7 rear on on custom valved Koni Race) I was very concerned but it turns out to be a very good match to my 15 x9 Hankook ventus z214 and nitto NT01 semi slicks (Emilio knows what he's talking about.... who knew? )
In fact when I put the splitter/wing aero on it isn't enough. Even without aero and as I get faster again (lap times have been tumbling lately) could probably go up myself........Emilio can probably confirm or or not but if your running 10's with hoosiers you may want to go up 1 in the springs....especially if your prioritising track over street.
I also run Extended Ball joints and heavy front swaybar (24mm i think).
Initially they were firm as all hell and I wondered if i'd made a mistake...I'm not sure on the realities of them "bedding in" but it sure felt like it. We actually got airborne on turn 1 bumps at pukekohe on the first 2 sessions after installation, things settled down after that.
They are now extremely comfortable on the road even at higher settings and fantastic on track. I recently ran an engine in via a 3 hour drive to our dyno tuners and had no comfort issues whatsoever.
Having never run that high a spring rate before (previously 10kg fr and 6/7 rear on on custom valved Koni Race) I was very concerned but it turns out to be a very good match to my 15 x9 Hankook ventus z214 and nitto NT01 semi slicks (Emilio knows what he's talking about.... who knew? )
In fact when I put the splitter/wing aero on it isn't enough. Even without aero and as I get faster again (lap times have been tumbling lately) could probably go up myself........Emilio can probably confirm or or not but if your running 10's with hoosiers you may want to go up 1 in the springs....especially if your prioritising track over street.
I also run Extended Ball joints and heavy front swaybar (24mm i think).
Long term plans, but I wondered how much down force was available and if spring rates would need adjusting.
Then I read Savington's S1 post and that he was looking for more front bar and maybe 1000 pound springs....with 200 tread wear tires!
It seems as if our setup has much more capacity/performance potential than I had expected!
245 Maxxis and great suspension FTW!
#19
So...I have been looking at Keisler drop spindles.
Better bearings, 3 pounds lighter per corner, better geometry with the 4.25"ish ride height, sounds pretty amazing!
Then I read that they are designed around a longer shock, but you can go with spacers?
So the Xida's become some sort of a compromise?
Suspension is not my strong suit ......They seem like a nice product and I need a sanity check before I delete these from my brain.
Thanks in advance!
Jamie
Better bearings, 3 pounds lighter per corner, better geometry with the 4.25"ish ride height, sounds pretty amazing!
Then I read that they are designed around a longer shock, but you can go with spacers?
So the Xida's become some sort of a compromise?
Suspension is not my strong suit ......They seem like a nice product and I need a sanity check before I delete these from my brain.
Thanks in advance!
Jamie
#20
Others with more specific knowledge on that product may comment but I think you are getting way ahead of yourself.
Mx5 with 949 big grip is one hell of a package (everytime we go out I am reminded) and finding the performance limits of that package alone will take a long time to complete, especially if you are coming from no driving, engineering or racing experience.
Sticking with a known, tried and true package with the amazing (sometimes argumentative ) community here AND 949 development behind you is a hugely compelling reason why I am working with the Xidas and the 949 / MT.net "formula". We are running one of (if not the) fastest track mx5's in the country and STILL have so much to learn and time left on the "board" .....drop spindles are a long way off our radar (if ever on it).
Unless you have a lot of experience, are finding a particular shortcoming or are having issues with the B grip kit I wouldn't get too far ahead of yourself.....(hopefully not sounding rude..)....just my opinion. Others may differ.
Track time is the ultimate performance improvement, build the car early, wait on some big ticket items and just get out there. the sooner the better. All the other stuff will come and become apparent when required.
Mx5 with 949 big grip is one hell of a package (everytime we go out I am reminded) and finding the performance limits of that package alone will take a long time to complete, especially if you are coming from no driving, engineering or racing experience.
Sticking with a known, tried and true package with the amazing (sometimes argumentative ) community here AND 949 development behind you is a hugely compelling reason why I am working with the Xidas and the 949 / MT.net "formula". We are running one of (if not the) fastest track mx5's in the country and STILL have so much to learn and time left on the "board" .....drop spindles are a long way off our radar (if ever on it).
Unless you have a lot of experience, are finding a particular shortcoming or are having issues with the B grip kit I wouldn't get too far ahead of yourself.....(hopefully not sounding rude..)....just my opinion. Others may differ.
Track time is the ultimate performance improvement, build the car early, wait on some big ticket items and just get out there. the sooner the better. All the other stuff will come and become apparent when required.