Trackday Preperation Questions

General discussions on all non technical car related topics

Moderator: The Mod Squad

Postby Snoozin » Wed Apr 06, 2011 3:45 pm

Semis on the the front, street tyres on the back is hilarious fun I must say... I ran the Honda like that and found it going sideways under acceleration as the rear couldn't keep up with the lateral grip the fronts were providing. That said, I actually ran faster times with street tyres all around.
User avatar
Snoozin
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 2836
Joined: Sat Feb 14, 2004 6:35 pm
Location: Bribing WOF Testers.....

Postby STR » Wed Apr 06, 2011 4:16 pm

Leon wrote:Where's that photo/slideshow thing of that Civic on mismatched tyres being turned into spare parts at Pukekohe when you need it ...

Not saying that's what *will* happen, but unless you're an old hand on the track, running lots more grip at the front can increase the risk of that sort of crash.

Is this the one you meant??
Image

Have to say I agree on the getting matched tyres front. Sure, it'd be great fun to be drifting around the place, but Pukekohe isn't exactly a forgiving track when you run out of talent...
82 KP60 4AGTE race car
S.T.R - Shopping Trolley Racing!!!
User avatar
STR
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 331
Joined: Mon Feb 28, 2011 8:13 pm
Location: West Auckland

Postby Jdawg » Wed Apr 06, 2011 6:19 pm

Friend with a tow rope
Jdawg
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 637
Joined: Wed Nov 08, 2006 5:46 pm
Location: Auckland

Postby Nuty|Mike » Wed Apr 06, 2011 6:37 pm

was in the pits for that crash and missus was on otherside watching it come towards her. She wont even drive in the driveway of puke anymore.

Not worth the risk id say
05 Mazda Verisa .....for the Family
User avatar
Nuty|Mike
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 1714
Joined: Tue May 28, 2002 12:02 pm
Location: Dunedin

Postby touge rolla » Wed Apr 06, 2011 7:05 pm

A fire extinguisher, someones car usually catches fire.
User avatar
touge rolla
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 781
Joined: Sun Jan 15, 2006 5:32 pm
Location: Wellington

Postby molex » Wed Apr 06, 2011 8:00 pm

Many good suggestions here.

Having run grippier tires on the front in a couple of FWD cars around pukekohe, I wouldn't suggest anybody else give it a go.

With all due respect to touge_ae101 I don't think he's had much/any experience at pukekohe. When it goes wrong, it can go very wrong... much higher speeds + a couple of places with minimal/no runoff as well as uneven surface and potentially uneven grip levels.

Don't let that put you off however, just be respectful and don't pile in balls out to the sweeper on your first ever lap!

When were you planning on going? I'm going to be there easter weekend.
molex
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 524
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2007 12:08 am
Location: Auckland

Postby Akane » Wed Apr 06, 2011 9:03 pm

I think that honduh not only (possibly) run mismatched front and rear tyres, the driver (most likely) does not understand the traction breaking point of slicks are a lot different to road tyres...........
No "stance", no "hellaflush", none of that bullshit. Nothing but no grip on full boost.
http://www.lol.co.nz/ random shit.
User avatar
Akane
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 4073
Joined: Tue May 14, 2002 2:08 am
Location: Auckland

Postby ch4ng » Wed Apr 06, 2011 11:19 pm

Wow, thanks for all the replies guys.

@ Molex: Ill be going on 23 April

@ Kinloud: Thanks. Ill stick to matched street tyres for now.

holden_fan2005 wrote:I found this a while back. Best if a track guru looks over it fist but that's what I'm going from.

http://planetsoarer.com/trackday/trackday.htm


...Street tyres aim for 38 psi cold...Tyres - pump up your street tyres to +45 psi - I know this sounds like a lot of pressure, but street tyres have softer sidewalls - they need the pressure to survive

That sounds like a lot of pressure

@ Touge_ae101: Looks like you like FWD drifting!
We have (sorta) similar cars. What tyre pressures have you run in street tyres (just to get an idea)

Im running 195/55R15[/quote]
Chondah Civic
2T Navara
ex:
Charade Detomaso
MX5 - Stancemobile
MX5 turbo - El Tigre
87 Alto - The Tragic 3cyl powah
AE111 BZ-G Death Race 15.09

No Limits Onsite Paint Repairs. Cut and polishing, stone chip and scratch repairs. 021-177-8539 Mention Toyspeed.
User avatar
ch4ng
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 595
Joined: Sat Dec 27, 2008 7:28 pm
Location: Auckland

Postby siren676 » Wed Apr 06, 2011 11:27 pm

:D Im going to the same track day. Ill hopefully see you there
1998 5dr Glanza V Replica - 5E-FHE powered

1990 Mazda MX5 NA6C drift build - Met a wall 2/5/15
User avatar
siren676
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 1015
Joined: Sun Jun 13, 2010 1:47 pm
Location: South Auckland

Postby touge_ae101 » Wed Apr 06, 2011 11:37 pm

ch4ng wrote:What tyre pressures have you run in street tyres (just to get an idea)

Im running 195/55R15


yeah i haven't been to puke before but been around manfeild and hampton downs quite a bit.

around 38psi sounds about right. i would check them again once they are warm and bring them down to about 38psi personally.
i have tried dropping them low but yeah not sure if it actually works like it does in a semislick tyre are they just end up overheating too quickly. going to a higher pressure felt a lot better.

if you want a really cheap/easy mod to do that will make your brakes last way longer, cut the stone guards out from the back of your discs. they hold the heat in something cronic and also do a better job at holding stones in where it is more likely to get caught up in the pad than anything else.

we measured it with a thermocouple between my brake temp and Robcam's brakes at megameet (same rotors/calipers) and mine were significantly cooler. made a huge difference and makes road pads last way longer.
User avatar
touge_ae101
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 1730
Joined: Mon Sep 14, 2009 7:23 pm
Location: Palmerston North

Postby ch4ng » Thu Apr 07, 2011 11:47 pm

@ siren, yep see you there!

@touge_ae101: good tip, ill look into that when i get my car up on the hoist in prep for the track.

Got a little list to do now.
Bleed brakes
Rotate tyres
Power steering flush (been putting off since I bought the car)
Remove brake backing plates

Really appreciate all this info guys, cheers
Chondah Civic
2T Navara
ex:
Charade Detomaso
MX5 - Stancemobile
MX5 turbo - El Tigre
87 Alto - The Tragic 3cyl powah
AE111 BZ-G Death Race 15.09

No Limits Onsite Paint Repairs. Cut and polishing, stone chip and scratch repairs. 021-177-8539 Mention Toyspeed.
User avatar
ch4ng
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 595
Joined: Sat Dec 27, 2008 7:28 pm
Location: Auckland

Postby siren676 » Thu Apr 07, 2011 11:52 pm

Quick question, can you pass a wof without backing plate/dust covers?
1998 5dr Glanza V Replica - 5E-FHE powered

1990 Mazda MX5 NA6C drift build - Met a wall 2/5/15
User avatar
siren676
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 1015
Joined: Sun Jun 13, 2010 1:47 pm
Location: South Auckland

Postby ch4ng » Fri Apr 08, 2011 12:14 am

Will endeavour to find out tomorrow at work
Chondah Civic
2T Navara
ex:
Charade Detomaso
MX5 - Stancemobile
MX5 turbo - El Tigre
87 Alto - The Tragic 3cyl powah
AE111 BZ-G Death Race 15.09

No Limits Onsite Paint Repairs. Cut and polishing, stone chip and scratch repairs. 021-177-8539 Mention Toyspeed.
User avatar
ch4ng
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 595
Joined: Sat Dec 27, 2008 7:28 pm
Location: Auckland

Postby siren676 » Fri Apr 08, 2011 12:22 am

cool, I may need to remove mine as i have put in bigger disks
and had to bend it back a bit
1998 5dr Glanza V Replica - 5E-FHE powered

1990 Mazda MX5 NA6C drift build - Met a wall 2/5/15
User avatar
siren676
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 1015
Joined: Sun Jun 13, 2010 1:47 pm
Location: South Auckland

Postby RobertC » Fri Apr 08, 2011 12:40 am

touge did you notice an improvement running the higher pressures? I remember at MM i was running 30 psi front and 28 psi rear hot. And i thought you were running similar. (I had loads more grip than when I was running 40 psi hot) On street tyres as well.
User avatar
RobertC
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 493
Joined: Sat Jun 19, 2010 11:35 am
Location: Auckland

Postby cogent » Fri Apr 08, 2011 1:26 am

wish I could find that post by coryn about how you NEED second hand v8 supercar race slicks otherwise there is no point in going to the track.
cogent
 

Postby touge_ae101 » Fri Apr 08, 2011 3:03 am

RobertC wrote:touge did you notice an improvement running the higher pressures? I remember at MM i was running 30 psi front and 28 psi rear hot. And i thought you were running similar. (I had loads more grip than when I was running 40 psi hot) On street tyres as well.


yeah i have been advised since then to try higher pressures and it seems to work awesome! it is a different feeling though going to higher pressures the car is more skaty than planted with the lower pressures but i suppose slow to react.
User avatar
touge_ae101
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 1730
Joined: Mon Sep 14, 2009 7:23 pm
Location: Palmerston North

Postby Stupra » Mon Apr 11, 2011 12:10 am

Video Camera & stop watch.
Get a mate to record your laps and film stuff. Good for recording the good memories of an awesome days racing, promo girls if any and of course having a laugh at the unfortunate crashes and rolls :)
Owner of Auto1 Whangaparaoa - ill hook you up!
89 Supra Turbo.
96 Supra RZ-S
http://toyspeed.blakjak.net/profiles/profile.php?id=398
https://www.facebook.com/pages/North-Ha ... 2488332604
User avatar
Stupra
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 366
Joined: Sun May 19, 2002 1:16 pm
Location: Auckz

Postby molex » Mon Apr 11, 2011 5:31 pm

I'll be there and will have incar camera + GPS based telemetry if anybody is interested in really improving their times :)
molex
Toyspeed Member
 
Posts: 524
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2007 12:08 am
Location: Auckland

Postby Chelles » Mon Apr 11, 2011 8:29 pm

touge_ae101 wrote:i tend to dissagree. i had semi's on the front for the first 5 or so track days when i first went to the track and only stopped using them cause they wore out to the point where they aren't a lot better than a road tyre.


I tend to disagree: I've run semi slicks on both my race cars, have for the best part of 10 years and find that they are far superior in grip to good road tyre (been there and done that). A good quality semi slick (not Falken Azenis) is going to last longer under extreme driving, be more consistent in heat capabilities (if correct tyre pressures are used) and they are designed for fanging about on the track.
Oh and did I read that right? You only ran semi slicks on the front... 8O

Track driving and road driving are very different.

The biggest thing I recommend you take is your 'sense of self preservation'... have fun, learn and take your car home in one piece. :)
'96 RS Mirage Race car... (and when I'm a good girl; EVO 1!!) 2014 Toyota Hilux - daily driver!!
Gone but not forgotten: Race car AE85.6 Levin, AE101 Trueno, 84 MR2 AW11, 94 MR2 SW20, SR coupe KE35, AE92 FXGT, AE91 FXZS...
User avatar
Chelles
TS Original Member
 
Posts: 2063
Joined: Sun May 19, 2002 12:36 pm
Location: Wellington

PreviousNext

Return to General Car Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 32 guests