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3/4 eliptic spoa
3/4 eliptic spoa
have any of you guys tried it and how was it eg good horrendously,unstable just lookin for something a little different to try tried a search but got nothing thanks in advance for any help.
I'm not entirely sure it is a good idea. I have built a couple of cars SPUA-3/4 elliptic, and it is quite useful, but can do some odd things under steep climbs, and this is generally on cars with RUF ( better balanced than stock) and with not mroe than 3" of suspension lift.
We had a car in the club that was SPOA + 3/4 elliptic, but it was never really fully sorted. Is never had bumpstops, so it tended to invert the (stock length) shackles what ever position they were set to. It was an extended wheelbase LWB (12" over stock LWB) so the funny weight transfer issues that SPOA's and 3/4's tend to exhibit were reduced, but it sure did body roll on side angles, as due to the higher COG of a SPOA, the 3/4 REALLY unloaded.
Personally, I think that more benefit would be had increasing front end travel rather than lowering roll stiffness and increasing droop more in the rear end.
We had a car in the club that was SPOA + 3/4 elliptic, but it was never really fully sorted. Is never had bumpstops, so it tended to invert the (stock length) shackles what ever position they were set to. It was an extended wheelbase LWB (12" over stock LWB) so the funny weight transfer issues that SPOA's and 3/4's tend to exhibit were reduced, but it sure did body roll on side angles, as due to the higher COG of a SPOA, the 3/4 REALLY unloaded.
Personally, I think that more benefit would be had increasing front end travel rather than lowering roll stiffness and increasing droop more in the rear end.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
roc box wrote:i thought that might be the case i was just loking for another opinion,thanks for the input i apprecate it.this particular suzuki,did it have a habbit of falling over by any chance even though mine is spoa i wouldnt say its unstable at all not even on off camber terrain.
longer flatter springs with a good shackle angle is what you want
Team UNDERDOG #233
WERock Australia thanks to
[url]http://www.longfieldsuperaxles.com[/url]
[url]http://www.rockbuggysupply.com[/url]
WERock Australia thanks to
[url]http://www.longfieldsuperaxles.com[/url]
[url]http://www.rockbuggysupply.com[/url]
I saw it fall over once, but it was surprisingly stable. Just looked really spooky. It had a pretty stiff front end with limited travel compared to the rear, which is pretty common for "modified" SPOA set ups, and I think that this is what kept it from falling over more.
The owner is 4 link/coil converting and I believe has lowered the car considerably.
The owner is 4 link/coil converting and I believe has lowered the car considerably.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
roc box wrote:any good suggestions tim
feroza springs in the rear and rears upfront
very stable
here is a side hill pic as u see almost no body roll
actually drove onto the sidewalls of the tires and the body didnt touch
so much for SOA's are unstable
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Team UNDERDOG #233
WERock Australia thanks to
[url]http://www.longfieldsuperaxles.com[/url]
[url]http://www.rockbuggysupply.com[/url]
WERock Australia thanks to
[url]http://www.longfieldsuperaxles.com[/url]
[url]http://www.rockbuggysupply.com[/url]
i run stock rears upfront
and stock ferozas in the rear + one stock rear main leaf with the eyes cut off (only on the drivers side)
yeh quite flexy
and yeh i know ive posted this b4
and stock ferozas in the rear + one stock rear main leaf with the eyes cut off (only on the drivers side)
yeh quite flexy
and yeh i know ive posted this b4
Team UNDERDOG #233
WERock Australia thanks to
[url]http://www.longfieldsuperaxles.com[/url]
[url]http://www.rockbuggysupply.com[/url]
WERock Australia thanks to
[url]http://www.longfieldsuperaxles.com[/url]
[url]http://www.rockbuggysupply.com[/url]
Re: 3/4 eliptic spoa
roc box wrote:have any of you guys tried it and how was it eg good horrendously,unstable just lookin for something a little different to try tried a search but got nothing thanks in advance for any help.
some pics to help you out
best to ask sam (overkill)
hes built n testerd 3/4 set ups on hes own rig
daryl
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if you go 3/4 in the rear on a spoa you will have a hard tme matching the rear to the front in flexability. You don't want the rear flexing way more than the front as this will tend to pitch the car over onto its side in alot of positions. If I was you I would be trying to get as much usable even flex between front & back
And yes those pics are oof a 1/4 eliptical setup which is a whole different kettle of fish
And yes those pics are oof a 1/4 eliptical setup which is a whole different kettle of fish
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roc box wrote:how much xtra flex will i get with ruf if its only a couple of inches i probly wont bother.
it's not just the additional flex that RUF gives you. it's additional stability. mega flex is WAY overrated.
You want good balance of flex front to rear and good weight transfer. That extra couple of inches make a huge diffrence in the way the vehicle behaves in climbs etc. I know that a couple of inches may not sound like much (as with cawk size) but it really is quite critical.
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