Whoops, my apologies... MAJOR failure to use the "quote" button. I meant oil change.
Oh, okay. Yeah, I was thinking that.
The only question that I have on that is whether or not Ford puts any "special sauce" in the initial oil fill for break-in. 1000 miles is the break-in interval, but that's the period in which you're not supposed to be on full throttle for extended runs, nor on a constant throttle/RPM setting for extended periods. But Ford probably expects you to stay on the factory fill until the magic oil change indicator says it's time to change it.
Needless to say, I've been nailing the throttle every chance I get once the oil's warmed up to temperature (which, thanks to traffic, isn't all that often, about once or twice every 30 miles or something) since the preponderance of evidence seems to support that as being better for the ring seals. But I don't know if changing the oil at, say, 1500 miles will prematurely halt the break-in of the engine or not, seeing how Ford calls for the 5W50 "full synthetic" for this car...
As for the relo brackets, I would hold off. I've run both with and without them, and at least in my experience, they made no difference whatsoever in the amount of "skirt lifting" under braking. Dampers and springs will do what you (may eventually) need there, but the A/S geometry is not the first place to look.
That's most unfortunate. It makes me wonder
why they make no real difference for that.
Oh, well. Money saved, I guess. :-D
For all I know, I may wind up deciding that the brake dive characteristics are worth tolerating in order to retain the ride quality I want...
I'm intentionally avoiding offering opinion on what you will experience, since I would prefer you to go in with a "clean sheet" mentality. Suffice it to say that yes, there are areas that could stand improvement, however, it's light-years more drivable than your old Fox! I have a feeling that for you, the journey is going to be half the fun.
Oh, at least that much!
Brilliant! Somebody is actually going to do what every instructor for the last 50 years has been preaching! Learn to drive. THEN learn to drive the car. THEN fix the car to make it faster. In that order. It looks like you're set square on the perfect path!
That's the idea, at least. As an engineer-type at heart, I like methodical approaches to things.
Yes, you missed the most important three:
1) Remove steering wheel airbag to allow tightening the loose nut behind it.
2) Large hole in center of seat bottom to allow clearance for larger gonads gained by learning to push the car properly.
3) New job to increase amount of disposable income to pay for all of this!
LOL!!
Fortunately for me, the job angle is already taken care of. Gotta admit, though, paying for the car put a bit of a dent in the finances, but that'll be recovered if given enough time. Or not, if I burn through the consumables too quickly!
Seriously, your list is just about perfect, only thing I don't remember is if you had brake cooling in there somewhere. If not, think about it. Pads and fluid for sure, the rest if you can.
I've got a brake duct kit ready for installation.
I'm not screwing around on the brakes. I'll have Stoptech pads (good to 1300 degrees, but still perfectly good on the street -- got 'em on my Stoptech brakes on my 300ZX Twin Turbo and they're wonderful), stainless brake lines (thanks, Terry!), Centric rotors, and the Ford Racing brake duct kit on the car before I turn a single corner on the track. Brake fade is absolutely the
last thing I want when entering a corner. This car is going to be a track toy in large part, but I
love this thing already and stuffing it into a wall would break my heart. Not gonna do that. My intention is to ramp up s...l...o...o...o...w...l...y and learn safely. One of the reasons I got GT5 was in the hopes of learning the track layouts so that I don't wind up going too hot into a corner as a result of not remembering what the corner characteristics are (my memory is worse than nearly everyone's, so this is a real concern for me). I was hoping its track editor would make it possible to "build" the tracks that it doesn't come with, but noooo...
Tires: Resist the temptation to get uber-sticky rubber, particularly at the start.
My intent actually is to stay on street tires, firstly because they're way cheaper (in part because they do double duty as, um, street tires!) and secondly because the idea is to have fun and not necessarily go fast. If I really wanted to go fast, I'd buy a cheap formula car or something of that sort. No, this is for fun and fun
alone.
So the tires I selected for my first round are Bridgestone S-04 Pole Position tires, sized 285/35-19. I selected these because they were
cheap (well, relatively speaking, at any rate) and, simultaneously, seemed to get good reviews (as I recall, there's a Mustang guy who liked them a lot. I can dig up the link if you're interested).
I figure that for someone like myself, tires are just something to learn on. They matter a lot if what you're interested in is maximum grip, and different tires have different behavior at the limit, but at the end of the day, it's up to the driver to make the most of them. I expect that one can learn a lot no matter what tires the car is shod with. Since my car is also a daily driver, the tires I use are going to have to do reasonably well on the street, and these look like they might do a good job there too.
I had a student in a Miata earlier this year, some track time, but horrendously inconsistent through the different phases of the corner. Saturday he had V710s on the car, and I talked him into swapping back to the all-seasons for Sunday. Suddenly, now that he could hear his tires giving audible feedback, he was able to grasp "consistant loading," and worked that into his repertoire. At the end of the day, his lap timer ap was showing him less than .2 seconds off of saturday's pace... I understand not wanting to trash your street rubber, but if you're at or near novice-level, the sticky stuff will make you feel like a hero, but they're a lot harder to learn the limits with. Just for the sake of argument, you may want to look at CHEAP all-seasons in whatever size floats your boat, but certainly nothing more aggressive than a 200 treadwear tire to start with. Once you learn that, and gain an understanding of the balance and the feel of being on the edge, then go to sticky's, and work your speeds up to where you have that same feeling.
I think the tires I selected have a treadwear rating of 280.
I get people wanting to lap the track as quickly as possible. I expect to be doing
some of that. But at the end of the day, what I'm really after is the driving experience itself. It's the journey, and not the results, that make it fun for me.
LOL!!! No. Using iRacing, I can't even get within 4 seconds of my real-world times!
Drat. Well, it's fun regardless, and there's probably at least
some similarity between them, so hopefully all my "seat time" isn't a
total loss.
