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Drifting All things sideways |
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12-22-2010, 11:43 AM | #31 | ||||||||||
RCC Loves Me Not You
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For yours and other consideration I quote the following from individuals in the business of mounting as well as designing the tires: Quote:
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group |
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12-22-2010, 11:54 AM | #32 |
Rotary Fanatic
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what use is information without a source? as far as i can tell, everything you quoted could be from the guy at les schwabb
all the arguments in this thread seem to be speculation. i've never seen/read about a tire failure due to stretching, altho the internet is pretty vast. i have however seen a properly sized tire dismount itself on track during a drift run. that was some comedy also please leave the whole grip racing performance aspect out of this.. no one is claiming a streched tire offers better traction, so i dont know why it keeps being brought up. i rarely see any drift people try to lecture about grip, and when they do im usually the first to rectify the situation lol
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Last edited by josh18_2k; 12-22-2010 at 12:01 PM.. |
12-22-2010, 12:59 PM | #33 | ||
Pirate
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alignment bump steer/angle adjustable tie rod ends corner balance proper wheel travel I am arguing FOR stretched tires, yet even I can tell you don't have an in-depth understanding of suspension at all. EDIT: Quote:
We recently had a volvo in our shop that had under 60,000k on it.. one of the front struts was blown to all hell, the other one was fine. When I took apart the blown side, guess what? It had no bumpstop! If, like you say, it was the spring that controls the shock travel, why did the strut blow? Spring: cusions the initial impact shock: controls the repeated movement of the spring so that the car doesnt bounce up and down all the time bump stop: prevents the shock from bottoming out under full compression of the shock absorber.
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Rotaries:They are NOT that complicated! Last edited by Max777; 12-22-2010 at 01:05 PM.. |
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12-22-2010, 12:59 PM | #34 | ||||||||
RCC Addict
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Again, another subjective opinion. You're in your own fantasy world if you think THAT'S objective. I think you need to learn and comprehend... Dictionary.COM "objective" : not influenced by personal feelings, interpretations, or prejudice; based on facts; unbiased; intent upon or dealing with things external to the mind rather than with thoughts or feelings, as a person or a book. Basically what you FEEL don't count as shit. OBJECTIVE is who is quicker using a stopwatch. OBJECTIVE is who is faster using a speed gun. Oh shit, you don't want to do none of that... I guess we will never know, huh. Quote:
Why don't you go reread your butt buddies comments earlier? Quote:
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Got bored on the other forum? Got tired of your fanboi groupies kissing your ass so much? Or did you pique the ire of a mod(s)? So this whole tirade was you morons just coming in here causing trouble... I guess you don't mind being banned and getting kicked out of here, huh. Quote:
You morons refuse to put that shit on a real track and put some times up. We were talking OBJECTIVE. Why bother? All you're going to do is bitch and moan about how drifting is about style (SUBJECTIVE). Waste of time. Oh, and get it right. I don't think anyone said it would not work. I think the point was that it's NOT RECOMMENDED. COMPREHEND. You morons already call the tire manufacturers and tire engineers idiots... Quote:
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You must've flunked art. No wonder you just follow the flock like sheep. Quote:
Glad we could accomodate you. Enjoy it before your ass is banned. -Ted |
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12-22-2010, 01:32 PM | #35 |
brap brap
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i thought this thread was done. well, for me anyways lol
and max777 i agree with your statement but im soo underpowered to a point where i can keep the car low but the spring keeps my car at height. nowhere close to where bump stops should be or is. with that wheel travel is sufficient for my setup, my car doest squat enough to rub or bottom out going through a corner. |
12-22-2010, 02:43 PM | #36 |
The Newbie
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Defining objective with an emotional argument: awesome.
@classicauto without knowing my suspension setup you can't tell me what part of my suspension flexes the most under load. The tire did make a large difference to the handling of the car when placed up front. Previously before that I was running the same type tire on a 17x7.5 wheel. As for the pot hole thing, I've hit them when not paying attention. I've not hit one while paying attention. I adjust the steering wheel to accommodate for them while driving on the street. Obviously yes, if the lip of the wheel is exposed it's more prone to damage. I'm not saying pothole don't exist, I'm saying be proactive about keeping your wheels nice. @speedjunkie probably the most valid argument yet. I live in Denver, driven in probably 20 states and 5 other countries. I apparently just don't find potholes as unavoidable as the rest of the masses. As for the name thing, I was pointing out the irony, not trying to come up with the wittiest thing I could think of. Just thought it was funny. @vex Yes, I'd like to see data on how the tire is deformed (yes, technical data). I agree with Josh, throwing up some random quotes without siting the source doesn't lend itself to the viability of the argument. Another consideration is how much stretch. I've seen some pretty shady stretches, if you're trying to stretch too far I could definitely see it as unsafe. I've got about an inch of stretch on my tires. Meaning each sidewall is flexed out about 1/2 an inch. If you're laying it down at more than about a 45 degree angle I would imagine problems. all the sudden your sidewall can be driven on in the right circumstances. @max I would imagine the strut blew because there is a range of efficient travel on a strut. Too high on the cylinder and it doesn't work well, too low on the cylinder and it will bottom out destroying it. Coilovers are a different story, they're designed to be able to adjust into their efficiency range. Mostly I see what you're doing here as an attempt to educate in the other factors of suspension and you realize this though. @RETed You're getting way too worked up buddy. The handling of a car is definitely subjective. Every driver has a way they would prefer it to drive. I prefer my front tires stretched to achieve what I believe to be more predictable handling for my driving style. If you think I placed an argument in there saying that everyone that drives cars like it to handle the same way you read into it somewhere. Cause I didn't. I explained my experience with the words "I personally...". Also, what I FEEL does count for shit in this argument, because I FEEL control of the car. Sadly you can't objectively argue control of a car. It's past it's limits while drifting, it's for me to tell you if I have more or less control of the car. Next you're saying that your argument is based solely on performance and the safety aspect isn't valid. You would somehow be satisfied if a car performed better on stretched tires than on non-stretched tires? I think the difference would be small enough it could come down the the driver, then become a subjective argument about driver, track conditions, etc. etc. etc. Everything is subjective and up for debate. How did you jump to an implication of drifting on the streets? These are the logical fallacies I'm talking about. I don't drift on the streets, I think you're throwing in a point that didn't come from this argument about your opinion of drifters in general. The point that was implied was, "If you're going to lose minimal performance, would you notice on the streets since you're unable to drive at the limits of your tires legally?" If you're going to argue objective, maybe you should keep your argument objective. Keep your preconceived notions of who people are out of it and argue the point at hand. There are 2 arguments here. 1) The subjective matter of tire stretch vs. standard sizing. 2) The safety concerns of stretching a tire. 1) doesn't really have a winning side it's like politics or religion. In the end it is subjective and the driver determines if they have more or less control of the car one way or the other. 2) could have an outcome but I don't see any data to back it up one way or the other. So I can only argue from my own experience that it works and I have had no problems with the setup. Because I track my car, the tires don't last long enough to have to worry about longevity of the tire (speaking purely of front tires here since rears don't last an event). So any malformation that might be caused by driving on it for 50000 (or whatever they're rated for) miles I wouldn't have any information about. The front tires probably don't last me 30% of the warrantied mileage so I'll never know unless someone can post up a study of some sort. I went to look up the rating for the sake of accuracy on my front tires and found this video. A test by Falken... with stretched tires, for grip. It's not a comparison of stretch vs. standard but I am looking at the tires 5sec and 18sec into the video and front and rear tires are stretched. Not huge amounts, but I can look at it and see the sidewall isn't vertical and the lip protector barely comes flush with the wheel. Whereas it's designed to overhang the wheel lip. Last edited by sofaking; 12-22-2010 at 02:46 PM.. |
12-22-2010, 04:01 PM | #37 | |
Pirate
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Max.
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Rotaries:They are NOT that complicated! |
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12-22-2010, 05:58 PM | #38 | |||||
RCC Loves Me Not You
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Furthermore stretching tires can run aground upon other design features such as Michelin's Stress Equilibrium Casings: Quote:
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I can continue if you'd like, but you get the issue (note I haven't said one way or the other besides saying that stretching is purely aesthetic). Sidewall defelction from what I've seen from properly maintained tires comes to about 0.3 inches give or take depending on lateral G's. I can secure that data more than likely with little issue.
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group Last edited by vex; 12-22-2010 at 06:06 PM.. |
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12-22-2010, 06:03 PM | #39 | |
RCC Loves Me Not You
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Would you like to see acceleration data, lap times, or some other metric? If you have an idea of what you want, I'm sure I can hunt it down for everyone to see. Beyond what I have already posted, what specifically do you have issue with? Is something stated that is not accurate or correct? If so, what is it and why?
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group |
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12-22-2010, 10:18 PM | #40 |
The Newbie
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Vex, you post up and clarify with sources for josh, then attempt to belittle me for asking the same question? You offered to post up the information from the tire manufacturers, when I asked for it... you proceeded to act like I was a moron for asking you to quote your sources. One of your quotes specifically said, "Without getting too technical..." I on the other hand would prefer someone to get technical instead of interpreting data that doesn't exist and hasn't been documented anywhere.
As for the data, any data would be good. I've not seen anything other than speculation about how this negatively effects anything. Though your quoted source in the last post (the engineer), said... "This is done strictly for looks.For practical purposes, the sidewall is taken out of the picture, and the vehicle might as well be riding on solid rubber. (Maybe that's next?) I've heard of a couple of cases where the tire bead pops off during cornering - result is a ruined rim." 1) statement 1 contradicts statement 2. If it is only for looks, yet does something... then it's not strictly for looks. I personally find this to be exactly the response I want from the tires (on my drift car). No sidewall roll, no messing around, turn wheel, car turns. Its not terrible on the street either, I've dailied the drift car without issue. 2) if you haven't heard of a properly mounted tire bead popping off during cornering... then you probably don't spend much time with cars. I had a tire bead break just parked one time. I came out and 1 tire was completely flat. Filled it back up and it drove for many thousands of miles without issue or losing any pressure again. So the engineer has proven my point, and not made a valid argument against it. No mention of safety or exploding tires, no mention of instant cancer to all those who drive with stretched tires. What I read was a statement of opinion about the process, mention of how it works, what the result is, and a negative scenario that can happen to any mounted tire. The quote about the sidewall blowing out on an underinflated tire isn't even related. That's about any tire, stretched or not. Has nothing to do with a properly inflated stretched tire. The michelen quote was unrelated too. If you're going to quote something do it about the subject. Even a test that shows that a stretched tire will break bead more often than a standard mounted tire would be something. But currently I'm in the same situation I started, no one has shown anything negative besides pure speculation and opinion that it's bad, or doesn't work. This topic's arguments against tire stretching are falling short of proving anything at all. Also, I notice how nobody made any mention of the fact that Falken stretched thier own tires in a grip test on video. Valid sources shown: Sofaking = 1 Forum = 0 Last edited by sofaking; 12-22-2010 at 10:22 PM.. |
12-22-2010, 11:02 PM | #41 | |
RCC Addict
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It's funny how you like to point the finger but I can assure you that you take the prize for arguing-for-arguments-sake. Yeah, you won. Have fun standing on your soapbox. I've got better things to do like cook up some steaks for dinner on the BBQ... -Ted |
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12-22-2010, 11:26 PM | #42 | |||||||||
RCC Loves Me Not You
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I just watched it. I did not hear, nor see any mention to the tire size or rim sized used, nor a mention of stretch on the tire. Perhaps you're a little premature... But there again I think that's probably normal for you in all respects.
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group Last edited by vex; 12-23-2010 at 12:32 AM.. |
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12-22-2010, 11:57 PM | #43 | |
Big Ugly
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In all respects Forum = 1 & SofaKing = 0 based on your video.
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Boosted Big Body On 335's PS3 ID: Rotordad 1986 Mazda RX7 GXL - Street ported 13BT, Haltech, 62mm, ect. 2006 MazdaSpeed 6 - Eagle, Wiseco, Cobb, ect. |
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12-23-2010, 03:21 PM | #44 |
The Newbie
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Vex, you've used opinion to validate an opinion that you've made. You haven't proven the premise that the sidewalls are deformed in such a way that the strength of the sidewall is compromised when stretching a tire.
You yourself stated that you believe that the sidewalls flex .3 inches under cornering. If we take that as a fact, then stretching .3 inches is within the design specifications of the tire. If we stretch each side by .3 inches then it would still be within the design specifications of the tire. Now we have a .6 inch stretch. I.E. a 215/40-17 could be put on a 9" wide wheel and still be within spec. Obviously this relies on another fact that you haven't proven, but in this case would the inflation of the tire not be acceptable at the factory listed pressure rating? You've attempted to belittle, avoid the point, misdirect, and argue with a premise that is based on some assumption you've made and not proven. Another point, I watched the video too. At 5 seconds and 18 seconds into the video it showed the tire from the side. If that sidewall is vertical then I'm blind. I can't speak to what the wheels are, because obviously the 370z had aftermarket wheels it would be possible that the Mustang does too. I know there are aftermarket replica wheels for Mustangs I'm unsure if they go larger than 10" wide. I thought they did but I can't find the website now. I'm not saying it's much of a stretch but I can clearly see the sidewall rolling over towards the tread from the wheel to the contact patch. Anyhow, I've lost interest. I'll check back for what I'm sure will be a display of Houdini like misdirection with a book of text not addressing any point I made. I'm not interested in replying anymore if you're not actually going to do anything but post links to shit unrelated. I pass to you the trophy RETed gave me for arguing. If anyone wants to PROVE the underlined sentence please feel free. I'm not saying that I'm right, I'm saying that no one has proven me wrong. Also, no, I'm not going to click your link and read another site about something that is unrelated to the topic because you made an assumption from the data correlating it to an unproven assumption made in this argument. I did look at the engineer quote link, it was completely unrelated and it had the most promise of your links. Feel free to puff up your chest on the internet, but in the end any intelligent person can see that you haven't proven anything, only attempted to mask the fact that you're arguing with unproven assumptions about how you think stretching tires should work. As for Titanium... ban me if you want. I could give a shit less. If getting people to prove thier point is a bannable offense, I didn't want to be here anyway. |
12-23-2010, 03:45 PM | #45 | |
RCC Loves Me Not You
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More to the point let's look at the actuality of the situation: Sidewall flex or more accurately stated; deflection under cornering load varies from tire to tire, this temporary load instigates the deformation and increased stress on the tire. This load also is temporary and allows the stress to be dissipated once the load is removed. If you're cornering with a stretched tire sidewall flex is removed which means you begin to affect the plastic deformation criteria of the rubber. Sidewall deflection under normal loading conditions of a proper tire are designed to remain in the elastic deformation region. That is the same region you are taking up when you stretch the tire. The more you stretch the less elastic region you have available to allow it to absorb stress. This is fact. Look at any stress strain curve if you don't believe me. Furthermore you have yet to address the issue of proper tire inflation. Something as simple as inflating a tire should be easy to validate with data. Surely you can provide at least that much for us 'nay sayers'?
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group Last edited by vex; 12-23-2010 at 03:57 PM.. |
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