When using the Tire Pro from Boydbilt, how do you correlate that measurement to your spring load?
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When using the Tire Pro from Boydbilt, how do you correlate that measurement to your spring load?
How do you equate the Boyds measurement to the on-track stiffness? Is that "blow up effect' of the centrifugal force during spinning a simple preload? Or, does that tension on the nylon actually impact the on-track rate?
Is it not a device to get a little closer to consistent setups?
I'd say the ranges in 1 single tire could be huge just depending on where you check it. The things aren't even round.
In the test they published, on 4 tires, the spring load was 60-130 lbs difference!
In my thinking, what kinda difference does it take for a good driver to feel!
I'm curious what the machine says between a new tire and one with 100 laps on it, an molested one, and a sipped only one, and a cut one.
Then I want to find a dirt track that's consistence enough from night to night, lap to lap for it to matter.
Then I want too see Davenport or the like do an A-B-A blind testing.
Without that, it's just marketing noise.
Not much difference then this spring rebound/histeria theory. In the dirt modified world, lots of those guys are replacing spring every 10 nights with $150/each springs because they feel the rebound goes away but can't be tested for.
Like tires, tires are bigger springs than the springs are.
Dirt tracks are often very rutted out and ruff by the time the feature happens. The track is usually in the process of developing a black streak, or maybe it already has a black streak most of the way through both corners by feature time. I have long believed that the very best drivers have a learned insticnt for how much corner speed the tires can handle through the corner without slipping too much. I also believe the same drivers have a much better than average feel for how much throttle thet tires can handle without too much spin. Both these things being said, these new chassis give the buyer alot of good info on spring loads, and these setup helps really help to make the cars better, but I will always belive that an elite driver is required in order to win big events. I believe the same group of elite drivers that are winning today could also win 30 years ago in the cars that were current in this ear.
Says the one who makes thinks an 8” spring gives you more sidebite lololol. But hey, when all else fails, make rearend jokes…… 👍🏻
NEVER said it did! Guees you failed reading comprehension as well!
Just stop guy.. rule 1 of sh*t talking on message boards: if you’re gonna critique someone’s reading/spelling/grammar (which is about the lowest level of insult possible) you HAVE to spell everything right in your post…… please go back to the tailgate section and talk about locking up Hillary and leave the Racecar talk to the people like MBR, Billet, etcQuote:
Guees you failed reading comprehension as well!
Excellent point.
Kinda like when weight distribution was set by 2x4's under the LR tire, kind of like when static scaling was all we knew, today we measure the loads differently, perhaps more accurately, I suppose tomorrow we realize that our "load numbers" don't 100 percent equate the various loads on the track either. For now, it' what we know and have the ability to do at home.