A Satria
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Jakarta, INDONESIA
S T O P !!!



that is SHRIFTER....BrettM said:Here is a bigger picture of the one we've been talking about using: http://awshifting.com/pictures/ShrifterSport.jpg
my mistake, I copy/pasted wrong.Priandhi Satria said:that is SHRIFTER....
What I mean is my own up-coming PADLLE from ThomasWheel. Did you get it or still on back order ?
Can you take a picture and upload it ??, all I see so far is a small picture...
The page cannot be foundBrettM said:
well it looks like you got it working, I guess I just really suck at the internet todayPriandhi Satria said:The page cannot be found
The page you are looking for might have been removed, had its name changed, or is temporarily unavailable.
:helpme:
It's difficult to judge accurately by the pictures since they are shot at various angles, but it appears as if you have build in a huge amount of anti-squat. As you've found out, this results in the rear lift under acceleration. The angle of the upper arms have as much or more to do with this as the lowers. The angle of both arms define the instance center, which in your case is very close to the lower link frame mount. The resulting anti-squat is well above 150%. Lengthening the lower arms will help, but you should do more.cagedxj said:This looks to be a street/road build which you need the rear to slightly lift under acceleration. If it lifts then you are causing body separation and forcing the transfer of weight to the tires. If it squats then you are absorbing the transfer of weight with the springs.
cagedxj said:This looks to be a street/road build which you need the rear to slightly lift under acceleration. If it lifts then you are causing body separation and forcing the transfer of weight to the tires. If it squats then you are absorbing the transfer of weight with the springs.
MaXJohnson said:
- It's difficult to judge accurately by the pictures since they are shot at various angles, but it appears as if you have build in a huge amount of anti-squat. As you've found out, this results in the rear lift under acceleration. The angle of the upper arms have as much or more to do with this as the lowers. The angle of both arms define the instance center, which in your case is very close to the lower link frame mount. The resulting anti-squat is well above 150%. Lengthening the lower arms will help, but you should do more.
- Trying to hold the the 66% length rule is not a good idea considering the space limitations on your street application.
- The preferred thing to do would be to move the upper link axle mount down and back and
- move the upper link chassis mount up and forward.
- This, combined with the longer and potentially lower chassis mount changes to the lower link should make a difference.
- There are no valid engineering reasons to have an anti-squat percentage above 100%. Contrary to common beliefs, anti-squat over 100% will not increase weight transfer to the tires. High anti-squat percentages increase the amount of weight transfer carried by the suspension links rather than the springs. In either case, the resulting weight ends up at the tire contact patch.
- Another negative of high anti-squat is a tendancy for the axle to chatter or jump during heaving braking. High anti squat percentages stiffen the suspension during braking or acceleration; neither of which is typically a good thing.
MaXJohnson said:
- I'm familar with the 4-link calculator,...
- It also looks like your tender springs are very close to coil bind.
Priandhi Satria said:
- OK, you put it very simple and easy.... that I can understand now...
- As for the spring, I have not tune-it properly, as I would like to re-do the lower arm first, then go into the COIL SPRING Tune-Up. By the time, I will have a proper upper coil, lower coils.
- Do you have a magic number for combined rate that I should have aimed for street usage ?
- thanks....
the softer rear may be the ticket for an off-road setup, but for street use, the rear should be stiffer than the front. I'd try a 160 or 180 pound front rate and a 200 pound or greater rear. Once you have coil rates set, you will still have to fine tune stabilizer bar rates(for the street).CRASH said:I PM'ed you, but I'll repeat here. You should shoot for 180-200 lbs/in in the front. I think you'll have very good handling on the road and a stiff enough spring offroad for good control.
The rear obviously needs to be softer, but not that much. I'd shoot for 140-150 lbs/in.
CRASH said:
- 80-200 lbs/in in the front. I think you'll have very good handling on the road and a stiff enough spring offroad for good control.The rear obviously needs to be softer, but not that much. I'd shoot for 140-150 lbs/in the rear.
This i'll try also once I have the rear lower control arm fixed.MaXJohnson said:the softer rear may be the ticket for an off-road setup, but for street use, the rear should be stiffer than the front. I'd try a 160 or 180 pound front rate and a 200 pound or greater rear. Once you have coil rates set, you will still have to fine tune stabilizer bar rates(for the street).