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#239 |
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Vorshlag R&D
Join Date: Nov 2011
Drives: A new one every month
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Not a sponsor here, so no.
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Jason McDaniel at Vorshlag Motorsports
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#240 | |
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Because compromise ®
Join Date: Jan 2012
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60 kg increase!! That's just crazy (in a good way). To think that 4 extra cylinders plus transmission plus a metric truckload of power only costs that much weight. Light weight seats, battery, wheels and bam! You're at zero gain.
Sounds mean too! Quote:
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My car is completely stock except for all the mods.
Last edited by Captain Snooze; 06-25-2015 at 08:10 AM. |
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#241 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2011
Drives: '23 BRZ
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Quote:
What measures were taken to move the c.g. aft? Engine weighs more and its c.g. is further forward, transmission weighs more and is further aft, but still well forward of vehicle c.g. => no way an LS3/T56 Mag transplant into an 86 moves c.g. aft without other stuff going on! A/C delete, battery moved to trunk, etc.? FTR the c.g. of an FD RX-7 moves forward a good 1.5% with LS/T56 transplant keeping all else equal. Not that its that a huge deal on a car that starts at 48F/52R :P |
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#242 | |
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Road-hole
Join Date: Jul 2014
Drives: 2013 Whiteout FR-S
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the trans and engine doesn't have to move aft of c.g.
Quote:
Jaden |
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#243 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2012
Drives: FRS Silver LS1 swapped.
Location: Texas
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Quote:
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#244 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2012
Drives: FRS Silver LS1 swapped.
Location: Texas
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Quote:
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#245 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2011
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Quote:
Let's say the 140 lb. T56 is 40 lb. heavier than the stock transmission (wag). Stock trans looks like its c.g. is ~16" aft of front wheel centerline. Say T56 c.g. is 6" aft of that (probably optimistic), 22" aft of front wheel centerline. Stock trans weight distribution on the front/rear wheels would be 84 lb. front, 16 lb. rear (100 lb. * 16"/101" wheelbase) T56 Mag would be 109.5 lb front 30.5 lb. rear. Stock weight is 2750 with 55/45 distribution, 1512.5 front/1237.5 lb rear. T56 Magnum would change the weight distribution to 1538/1252, or 55.1/44.9. Just don't see the transmission giving any weight distribution benefit, particularly if the T56 is significantly heavier. If they're the same weight and it's moved aft, that would move c.g. aft a small amount, tenths of a percent. I'm betting it's a wash between the added weight and it being moved aft. |
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#246 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2012
Drives: ZC6, Junk of ALL sorts
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Yeah,
For the reliable, huge, torque increase vs weight increase. In my opinion it's an absolute hell yes. With proper suspension, fuck yes. How long can you consistently beat on a 400ftlb FA? How long can you consistently beat on a 400ftlb LS? Which engine has more meat left on the bone? As said before transmission choice is also tits. If the numbers are true. I would assume you could reduce the total weight back to stock. Without losing any luxuries/amenities.
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# 1. Always know where your towel is.
ZC6-CBS, is home |
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#247 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2011
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Quote:
I just don't see how weight distribution will not move forward unless other measures are taken.The XL has an extended tail housing, doesn't move any major masses aft relative to the regular T56 Magnum. FA20 may be heavy for an aluminum 2.0 four cylinder, but it is certainly lighter than a 450 lb. LS engine. The boxer may sit relatively forward, but it's a lot *shorter* than an LS. So that even with the cylinder heads back against the firewall, there's no way the LS c.g. is aft of the FA20's, indeed it looks to be forward of it. The 86 swap is the opposite of the BMW swap case, where the stock engine is much LONGER than an LS V8 and might actually be heavier. In that case, c.g. moves aft no question. I could see how moving the battery from the front of the car to the back could get you back to stock distribution or slightly better, though. Anyway, killer project and I'm looking forward to seeing it run! |
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#248 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2012
Drives: FRS Silver LS1 swapped.
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Quote:
June 24 at 12:36pm Terry Fair A stock BRZ/FR-S has a F/R ratio of 56% front / 44% rear. It is now 52% front / 48% rear with the V8. Last edited by cf6mech; 06-26-2015 at 06:24 AM. |
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#249 | |
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Road-hole
Join Date: Jul 2014
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I had started to repond to him then just stopped...
Quote:
Think of it as two sideways L's where the long part of the L represents the frame of the car and the little part of the L representing a line going to the ground at the axle line. The front rear bias will be based on a division of where the balance of the weight resides on the length of each L, so shifting backward a balance point on the two L's can have a significant effect on the F/R bias because it affects both the fulcrums balance points, not just one. Jaden |
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#250 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2012
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Correct
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# 1. Always know where your towel is.
ZC6-CBS, is home |
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#251 |
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Junior
Join Date: Aug 2013
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I dont really care where the COG is, im just happy its well under 3000lbs. a good suspension system will help alleviate any under steer from front weight bias.
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"Ah! What music! They could have never imagined, those pioneers who invented the automobile, that it would posses us like this, our imaginations, our dreams. Men love women, but even more than that, men love CARS!"-Lord Hesketh
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#252 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2012
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Quote:
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Parting out HERE
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