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vbgagnon said:rd that is best for your situation and driving style. If his setup works for him then what he has would actually be best.
mikeburgin said:do you run on a smooth blue groove style track, were drifting is possible all the time, the more drive you have in the rear the less steering you have in the front, tends to push the front end around alot more than normal, also makes the car snappy when it does finally turn
I run 5k front 7k center and 1k rear
Mike
thick front, thin rear will give you over steer, but only under power, and understeer off power, for every plus there is a minus, examp;e would be 1kfront 5k middle 1k rear car would turn well into corner but would not exit the corner as wellLessen said:Actually Z, pushing is when the rear won't go around the front. A vehicle pushes when the front tires loose grip before the rear tires do. Then the car won't turn and it essentially pushes through the turn. This is common to FWD cars, also known as understeer. in Nascar terms... it's tight.
Being loose is just the opposite, when the rear tires loose grip before the front tires do and the rear end want to kick out in a turn. Also known as oversteer. Common to a RWD layout.
the part that I'm not clear on so far is what combination of oils gives a buggy oversteer vs. understeer. so..
thick in front, thin in rear= ?
thin in front, thick in rear= ?
would sound like he is a off on trigger driver, doesn't use half throttle around corners, hense needs the back end of the car to slide in the corner, this setup would not be a fast one around a dusty or slippery track, mayber alright on high grip track thoughvbgagnon said:I've never run the xterm, but typically that seems like a thick fluid in the rear, but if it works for you then its a good setup.
Different fluid setups work in different situations, different track layouts and terrains. If you like the way your ride handles then its setup the way you want it to be!
A standard setup would be 5k 5k 3kRustlerDood said:5k (front), 7k center, and 1k in the rear would be better.........
remeber it depends on the track he runs, surface bumps etcRustlerDood said:5k, 7k, 1k is used by the pros i.e. Yuichi Kanai and the like......so no, that is no just best for my situation and driving style. His driving style will adapt and lap times will drop........also other people are recommending the EXACT same setup so...........
vbgagnon said:This is the last time I reply to your stupid ass. I said if he runs that weight oil and likes the way the car drives the go for it. When the wheelers were at ofna they must have been slow because they were running 3k, 3k, 5k in their buggies. Man they must be stupid because RustlerDood says to run 5k7k1k. I'll tell them that you are a god and everybody should bown down to you!
Plaidfish said:I do understand how they work...I just want to try and see how it handles or more TTP, How I can drive it...you never know how the diffs will respond to your driving style as well....rather than me training myself to change the way I drive into/out of corners why can't we adjust the buggy to our own personal driving style?....I think this is what VB was trying to say earlier....if I know I go WOT throttle til the last minute and let of the throttle around the corner and punch it coming out then I would want a thicker oil ( in the front) than the standard 5-5-3 you mentioned so I can wail out of that turn once my buggy passes the apex (the peak of the turn)......I know you are saying the track conditions also play into the roll of this but not many of us here (I'm pretty sure) change the fluids that often for track conditions.....I hope I summarized everyones opinions here so we can stop what seems to be going towards an argument...mike I liked your summary very much, thanks.....
sorry plaid i just read what i wrote again and if you werent inside my head you would probably think that was ago at you, wasn't meant that way at all, noticed a few other coments on here that sort of look like people need to read up a bit on difs for a better understanding,Plaidfish said:I do understand how they work...I just want to try and see how it handles or more TTP, How I can drive it...you never know how the diffs will respond to your driving style as well....rather than me training myself to change the way I drive into/out of corners why can't we adjust the buggy to our own personal driving style?....I think this is what VB was trying to say earlier....if I know I go WOT throttle til the last minute and let of the throttle around the corner and punch it coming out then I would want a thicker oil ( in the front) than the standard 5-5-3 you mentioned so I can wail out of that turn once my buggy passes the apex (the peak of the turn)......I know you are saying the track conditions also play into the roll of this but not many of us here (I'm pretty sure) change the fluids that often for track conditions.....I hope I summarized everyones opinions here so we can stop what seems to be going towards an argument...mike I liked your summary very much, thanks.....
mikeburgin said:sorry plaid i just read what i wrote again and if you werent inside my head you would probably think that was ago at you, wasn't meant that way at all, noticed a few other coments on here that sort of look like people need to read up a bit on difs for a better understanding,
as far as setting the car up to your driving style, you can but there is a right way and a wrong way to drive, new people tend to be all throttle and brake and no throttle or brake control, not saying that you are, the reason the pros setup the way they do, is because the way they drive is the fastest way, if you want to be competive you need to alter the way you drive to get the fastest times, not to alter the car to get the fastest lap times for the way you drive, if you learn to drive properly u will be fast!!!!!!!!
