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| Suspension | Chassis | Brakes -- Sponsored by 949 Racing Relating to suspension, chassis, and brakes. Sponsored by 949 Racing. |
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#15 |
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NASA SpecE30 Racer
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I bought the Cusco ones to eliminate the rear negative camber, and I wish I had waited longer and done more research. As long as the Whitelines are easily adjustable without removing the arm from the subframe, then I will go with them. These Stance arms look like they will suffer with the same issue as the Cusco arms in that the adjusters are near impossible to get a wrench on to tighten once attached to the subframe.
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Street/Track Car: 2006 Honda S2000 TT3 || Race Car: 1987 BMW 325is SpecE30 || Tow Vehicle: 2014 RAM 1500 EcoDiesel Sold Cars: 2012 BMW M3 || 2013 Subaru BRZ || 2012 Porsche Cayman R || 2009 Chevrolet Z06 || 2009 BMW M3 || 2004 BMW M3 || 2004 Nissan 350Z |
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#16 |
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steel is a stronger metal than aluminum. the benefit of aluminum is that you can make the cross section a lot larger for the same weight as steel, making back the strength and making it stiffer.
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#17 |
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Banned
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Of course but it's all in the design of the part. The SPC arms are unboxed and honestly not all that strong looking to my untrained, un-engineer mind. They were significantly less expensive while giving me the options I wanted without the frills I didn't need.
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#18 | |
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Detroit Region, MI
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Just because it's common doesn't make it good or correct. and for racing applications, wear-out isn't a big concern because they are meticulously maintained... so replacing a heim joint isn't difficult. For a street car... it's just bad practice.
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2005-06: #192 ES 91 MR2 N/A Hardtop 2007-08: #54 STX 05 WRX Sedan 2009-12: #92 BSP/ASP 07 Solstice GXP 2013-14 : #192 CS 13 Subaru BRZ |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Sccabrz192 For This Useful Post: | Calum (02-06-2013) |
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#19 |
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GreddyBRZ meets GreddyFRS
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What is the recommended after market Daily Driving Control arm? I would prefer one that gets my camber back to not wearing out my rear tires as fast....
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#20 | |||||
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IMO, in designing aftermarket parts, the OEM strength should be the minimum strength baseline. Quote:
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I have modified control arms and other structural components on my cars, but with a keen eye towards maintaining or improving structural strength and strength- and stiffness-to-weight. Throwing out critical primary structure that was developed by a small army of competent engineers and subjected to countless hours of structural/reliability/durability testing, and replacing it with something where when strength goals weren't met by the initial poor design, the requirement bar was lowered? Bad idea if you ask me... |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to ZDan For This Useful Post: | Calum (02-06-2013) |
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#21 | |
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Kuruma Otaku
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Because titanium. |
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#22 |
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Dimman - It allows the control arm to be "hollow" and save a little weight by putting the LCA in double shear. I assume that MKIV LCA is solid aluminum or boxed steel. On the BRZ/FR-S, the lip only on the upper side, but I speculate there are two reasons: 1. it's cheaper and easier to manufacture. 2. It strengthens it in compression where the part is weaker and sees more force. In tension the force is equal to the weight of the corner only.
ZDan - Engineering's all about compromises though, whether it's weight, strength, stiffness, cost, etc. but I think that's where structural engineers and motorsport engineers differ. In most forms of engineering a safety factor of 3+ is normal, in civil a SF of 10 is common. In motorsports, that means you're carrying way too much unnecessary weight. It's not unheard of to have a SF of 1.5 or lower, but they have low volume, high quality manufacturing, that are meticulously maintained, and replaced on a schedule. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to EarlQHan For This Useful Post: | Dimman (02-05-2013) |
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#23 |
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Senior Member
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I thought STANCE has a great reputation on here. I've seen several people chime in with these on their FRS/BRZ and all I've seen are positive reviews. From what I see, their Super Sport coilover is an entry-level priced coilover with great customer support and their brand is used in many forms of motorsport successfully.
I know I personally cant wait to get their coilovers with Swift springs, these rear lower control arms, and their subframe collars for my FR-S which I am building primarily for drift. My 2 cents, Im sure many of you guys know way more about this engineering stuff than me like EarlQHan, I just drive and know what feels good to me.
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#24 | |
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One thing is pretty sure: the structural requirements are the same, and there are multiple ways to meet the structural requirements while keeping weight and cost minimized. Cast or forged I-beam is one way, stamped hat-section (with lightening holes in FR-S/BRZ case) is another. In any case, the difference is not for no reason, but then again it may not be for any major reason, either. The arm has to withstand tension/compression and vertical bending forces. Multiple *good* cheap easy ways to do that while keeping weight minimized. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to ZDan For This Useful Post: | Dimman (02-05-2013) |
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#25 | |||||
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In race teams, there is no "motorsports" engineer who overrides the structural engineer because the environmental requirements make the parts heavier. All the engineers (aero, structures, systemes, etc.) are working to the same goals. Quote:
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But if the supplier isn't giving an inspection interval and inspection method, the part had *better* be as durable and reliable as the factory part. Quote:
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If they were *smart* about it, they could replicate the OEM part strength and durability while giving adjustability and reducing weight. THAT would be worth an enthusiast's money. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to ZDan For This Useful Post: | Calum (02-06-2013) |
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#26 |
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Sooo... are there any rear lateral links currently on the market worth buying or are they all pretty much bling bling junk? Anything in the pipeline I should wait for instead?
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#27 |
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That Guy
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GTSpec and SPC both have decent looking offerings. The SPC does away with heim joints and uses a unique camber adjustment method. The GTSpec look better then most other offerings because of the position of the heim joint threads in that they are as far out as possible, reducing the force on that area. Both are stamped steel which gives me a warm fuzzy.
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#28 |
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Senior Member
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ZDan - Motorsports doesn't have structural engineers per se. It's tasked to the individual design engineers to carry out the process from cradle to grave. I agree with your logic wholeheartedly though.
Without breaking confidentiality, I can say the arm was developed to withstand the following loads: 10G instantaneous bump 1G braking + 2G cornering + 1G bump combined 2.5G cornering Weight transfer effects were considered. Are there more efficient designs? Yes. Are there more effective materials? Yes. But there were other aspects they had to consider. Stance is a value brand that offers good quality at a good price. If I had to compare suspension brands to stores, with Megan Racing being the dollar store and Ohlins being Whole Foods, Stance is like Target. You get everything want and need without breaking the bank. |
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to EarlQHan For This Useful Post: | Calum (02-07-2013), continuecrushing (06-08-2013) |
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