Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast
Results 21 to 40 of 43
  1. #21
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    1,014

    Default

    The jdm lift stick is an aluminum bar, with a set of urethane biscuits in it to replace the 5th and 6th coil springs. Standard lift bar, standard location.

    The nueline deal does kinda a pull, I have not really talked to anybody that tried it but I have strong doubts.

  2. #22
    Join Date
    Aug 2016
    Posts
    212

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Burke1118 View Post
    I think it's something else. That nueline deal is hilarious. "MORE TRACTION AND SIDEBITE!" "...how?" "Crickets"
    With the more traction thing, the lift arm is able to move ahead without changing the angle between the arm itself and the pick up point because of a slider unit on the nose of the arm between the brake side bushings and acceleration bushings.The angle between the two is more stable when compared to traditional 5th coil unit. This means it’s more effectively lifting on the chassis at any given point. Using bushings instead of a spring, that force is fed into the tires more quickly. This improves the speed at which the tires gain traction from the bar. The improved side bite claim I think is directly linked to the improved rear traction. Better loading on the tires will increase their ability to grip, obviously, and with the mounting point lower in the car, it doesn’t have as significant amount of impact on how the chassis rolls with the throttle applied. Curtis is an engineer, and not just some joe blow guy who decided to come up with some random idea. I know a lot of guys on pavement who have tremendous success with his lift arm and swear by it. On dirt, I don’t know anyone who’s actually ran it because most just run with what comes on the car and try to make it work.

  3. #23
    Join Date
    Mar 2018
    Location
    Macon GA
    Posts
    218

    Default

    ^^ the angle difference is negligible in my opinion.. and any efficiency gain caused by maintaining a 90 degree angle is offset by the wasted energy trying to over come the stiction of the sliding mount. As far as “feeding force into the tires more quickly”.. that depends where in the range of travel the lift arm is.. being that the urethane is progressive, initially it will load the tires more slowly. After the progressive graph intersects with the linear graph of whatever coil spring we are comparing it to, only then is it loading the tires quicker. From what I’ve seen, they also aren’t “shocked”. So any harmonics or resonance is damped strictly by the hysterisis of the urethane..not good. As far as it effecting body roll, why is more body roll good to begin with? And imo it’s close enough to the center of the car to not have a noticeable effect anyways (also remember this would be a similar effect as anti-roll or anti-dive. Wouldn’t effect amount of weight being transferred, just the ratio of weight transferred elastically vs kinematically)If “force feeding the rear tires quicker” is how it provides traction, why would it be fast on a pavement car? There is no way it works quicker than a solid top link, which is what most cars use. It’s snake oil as far as I’m concerned. Using “MORE TRACTION AND SIDE BITE” as a selling point without being able to provide any proof or reasoning behind it when confronted doesn’t lead me to believe he’s a very good engineer. I’ll stick to a lift bar and not worry about hacking up my chassis in order to run the newline expensive shiny liftbar with a bumpstop

  4. #24
    Join Date
    Aug 2016
    Posts
    212

    Default

    Are you sure??? Have you checked the efficiency of the bar comparing the two? I doubt it.And going back to urethane, one of the reasons you get a progressive load curve is BECAUSE it turns motion into internal stress which STOPS MOTION, hence the term bump stop. If you want weght to transfer quickly, then that’s the way to do it. Not deflecting through a coil. And t might not work quicker than top solid link, but a top solid link is never straight up and down a lot of that energy is lost through ANGLE. You don’t need to be a genius to figure that out. When you have a 30* angle in a pull bar you’re measuring that angle from the horizontal not from vertical. If you measured vertical at zero that pull bar would be on a 60 degree angle and less than HALF of that force is acting in a way that actually produces a downward force on the rear end. Not to mention, shorter mounting point of a pull bar to increase leverage picks up mainly on the rear of the car so it really only re distributes the weight at the back of the car. The further ahead you move it the less angle you get and the more angle you try to put in you must move it up and it loses leverage... soooo... that’s also something to consider. It’s quicker than a spring for the sake that it maintains its angle, at 90 degrees and not only does it depend on the stack, but the pre load as well. Yes some rates might be softer and offer more initial wrap up, which on very slick tracks is what you want, but when there’s grip the bushing will reach its peak load sooner than a coil. Have you actually tried to get a hold of Curtis? And ask him yourself? I’ve been working with him on a couple things here actually and he’s been very helpful. He did have to go for surgery around a month ago and hasn’t been able to keep up with things as he’s had some complications as a result of his surgery.

  5. #25
    Join Date
    Aug 2016
    Posts
    212

    Default

    And if you look at his bump stack rates, most of them will produce quicker loading curves than a coil except for the really really soft ones if you’re using a stack of three. Which is common on dirt, sometimes four depends on what you’re looking to do. Stack of two you’re looking at more early progression, and that is the more common set up for pavement.

  6. #26
    Join Date
    Aug 2016
    Posts
    212

    Default

    And let’s get honest here how much is your lift arm really? Once you factor in the price of the fifth coil and shock, which are now adjustable in almost every car, and sixth coil, the lift arm itself.... You’re probably looking at $700. $150 for the lift arm let’s say... anywhere from $300 to $625 for an adjustable fifth coil shock and that isn’t even the most expensive and tuneable stuff... then you need springs that are what 80 bones a piece, give or take 20 here or there. If you want to adjust the fifth coil rate while it operates then you’re looking at a bit more money to throw at the car in the form of a dual stage stacked spring kit with a lockout and another spring. Now if it comes with the car, then okay, it’s already included in the price. Not a big deal but to purchase all that stuff, isn’t as cheap as you might think man. Right now the lift arm at Neuline is $575 or so, with everything included. So it’s not as expensive as you’re saying it is if you compare it to the cost of going to it from a fifth coil lift arm found in most cars, to going from a car that has the Neuline lift arm in it, to a new lift arm with a fifth coil.

  7. #27
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    thedirtysouth
    Posts
    4,014

    Default

    this idea may be great on a asphalt car , but on a dirt track , its hard for me to believe it is better than a system with some form of dampening ,

  8. #28
    Join Date
    Aug 2016
    Posts
    212

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by fastford View Post
    this idea may be great on a asphalt car , but on a dirt track , its hard for me to believe it is better than a system with some form of dampening ,
    I would normally agree with you, but knowing how sensitive a pavement car is to any type of input to the chassis 0.1” miscalculation on front suspension travel can make the car undriveable, to dirt where 0.1” happens everywhere because you’re trying to calculate best platform over a rough surface and need to leave AT LEAST that much room for clearance under the car, and there’s changes that large all over the place quite often. If it works good in a chassis that’s extremely touchy, I’m pretty sure it would work good in a dirt car and if you’re really THAT worried I’m 100% positive you could easily install a damper into that design for a relatively small amount of money.

  9. #29
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    thedirtysouth
    Posts
    4,014

    Default

    thats what i was thinking , just put a shock behind it , which could become another adjust-ability tool in its self , by changing valving and/or moving the shock front to back, of course there is more expense , as far as sensitivity goes , just concerning the traction device , ie lift bar or pull bar , i would think dampening would be more important on dirt because of the many transitions the car goes through when compared to pavement.

  10. #30
    Join Date
    Aug 2016
    Posts
    212

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by fastford View Post
    thats what i was thinking , just put a shock behind it , which could become another adjust-ability tool in its self , by changing valving and/or moving the shock front to back, of course there is more expense , as far as sensitivity goes , just concerning the traction device , ie lift bar or pull bar , i would think dampening would be more important on dirt because of the many transitions the car goes through when compared to pavement.
    And let’s say that’s the case because you can see even on asphalt with this thing, the braking and on gas had weird spots it seems like, where on throttle the brake side bushings have zero load in them, and as the brakes are applied the lift arm comes down, unloads the acceleration side completely and compresses the brake side. Controlling that will NEVER under any circumstance be a bad thing. Is the design better? I think so. When it comes down to how it works and the theory behind it, absolutely I believe in this product. But like you have said, it’s not perfect. What would be interesting would be to combine methods that would keep pre load in the rubber bushings on both compression and rebound sides, and like you’ve said.. adding dampening to it. Combine that with the stuff on the market. Now I would almost put my money on it being much better than the stuff out and about right now. That’s one thing I’ve been working on and talking to Curtis about actually is changing how the bushings are pre loaded in order to make the entire device keep some stored energy in it when it would normally be unloaded... I never talked to him much about adding dampeners though. But between those two changes, I think that will help make the transition much better, and like you’ve said adding a dampener would probably improve it even more. Then compare it to current fifth coil and 6th coil applications.

  11. #31
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    thedirtysouth
    Posts
    4,014

    Default

    if you could preload the bushings both ways , then it would probably cut down on total travel of the lift arm in relation to mounting point on chassis , so you would probably need a pretty stiff shock mounted closer to the rear end to have a good effect , were just getting around to trying the digressive set up with springs , i do think this stick might be something to try as well , because i have always been one to try things out side the box , how do you contact this curtis guy?

  12. #32
    Join Date
    Aug 2016
    Posts
    212

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by fastford View Post
    if you could preload the bushings both ways , then it would probably cut down on total travel of the lift arm in relation to mounting point on chassis , so you would probably need a pretty stiff shock mounted closer to the rear end to have a good effect , were just getting around to trying the digressive set up with springs , i do think this stick might be something to try as well , because i have always been one to try things out side the box , how do you contact this curtis guy?
    I just went to the web site and then went to “contact us” and started talking with him that way. Haven’t heard from him in a little bit. I know he did have surgery recently and was away for a bit. Another thing I’ve been trying to work on is to get away from springs and rubber entirely. A hydraulic cylinder with check valves, control valves and pressure relief valves to control the speed and pressure of the fluid. Set up properly you could make it progressive, linear, digressive, or even have it progressive and then turn digressive. Have it fully adjustable from under the car. I know a lot of guys who do hydraulic work and instrumentation controls on gas wells so they have a lot of know how. Still in the drawing up stages but hopefully I can make it real eventually here.

  13. #33
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Batavia, OH
    Posts
    13,635

    Default

    ^^^Sounds illegal. LOL
    Modern Day Wedge Racing
    Florence -2
    Atomic - 1

  14. #34
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    thedirtysouth
    Posts
    4,014

    Default

    I have saw a shock , basically a hydraulic cylinder with no spring or rubber of any kind on it , a few years back , he was very good when track was smooth and slick , but any rough or tacky , and he was terrible , I can see where what you are talking about , if designed to be adjustable for any condition , would be great , BUT , as MSR stated above , with every one focusing on cost reduction as being the answer to all the DLM problems now days , it will be banned by the time it hits the track ,

  15. #35
    Join Date
    Aug 2016
    Posts
    212

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by MasterSbilt_Racer View Post
    ^^^Sounds illegal. LOL
    Possibly illegal to show up to a race with. Not illegal to test with lol.

  16. #36
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    2,930

    Default

    The Lift stick i seen on a LM had the stick and a shock in front, not sure of the valving of course but a good DA there you could have the whole realm of sustainability.

    Just say no...

  17. #37
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    495

    Default

    Just put a reese bar on and be done with it....

  18. #38
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Batavia, OH
    Posts
    13,635

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by erm11 View Post
    Just put a reese bar on and be done with it....
    What I was thinking...
    Modern Day Wedge Racing
    Florence -2
    Atomic - 1

  19. #39
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    MOULTRIE GA
    Posts
    306

    Default

    Anybody got any pictures or web site ?

  20. #40
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Posts
    687

    Default

    Just google JDM lift stick. $400!?! No thanks.

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:52 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.0
Copyright © 2024 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.