Boaisy
Dark Knight
Hope to be able to share the other pics soon. Trying to be careful on what I share at this time....for a few reasons.![]()
*cough* UPR *cough*
Hope to be able to share the other pics soon. Trying to be careful on what I share at this time....for a few reasons.![]()
This piece no doubt looks very stout and could probably survive an IED strike but I suspect that there is a very fine line between a finished product that is both "strong enough" and light compared to one that ends up being overweight/overkill if some restraint is not used during the design and build phase.
Is the BMR crew shooting for this unit to weigh less then the popular Fays2 unit on the market which some may argue as being on the heavier side of the Watts Link offerings?
Thanks
This piece no doubt looks very stout and could probably survive an IED strike but I suspect that there is a very fine line between a finished product that is both "strong enough" and light compared to one that ends up being overweight/overkill if some restraint is not used during the design and build phase.
Is the BMR crew shooting for this unit to weigh less then the popular Fays2 unit on the market which some may argue as being on the heavier side of the Watts Link offerings?
Thanks
+1 a little weigh outback in these cars isn't bad IMO- as long as it's unsprung.The Fays2 is about the same weight as the Whiteline unit but it is less unsprung weight. IIRC it is about 28lbs but my memory could be off.
Just judging by the few pics I've seen, I think your unit will be similar or slightly less weight wise. I like that most of it will be unsprung weight.To be 100% honest, I never had any clue of what a Fays 2 unit weighs.
Never even thought about that, until you mentioned it.
Will the chassis mounted setup have longer arms than the Fays unit,,,, I hope?To be 100% honest, I never had any clue of what a Fays 2 unit weighs.
Never even thought about that, until you mentioned it.
Will the chassis mounted setup have longer arms than the Fays unit,,,, I hope?
I have run the Saleen unit with the much longer arms though it was diff mounted. I also ran the Fays and just found the handling to be a bit twitchy. I really preferred how the Saleen unit worked. A lot! I attributed the difference to the arm length.I'm not sure what is to be gained by going to longer arms. I'm pretty sure the Fays2 unit will stay vertical in travel until the rear shocks either get damaged from extension or damaged from compression/axle hitting frame. The tall football on the Fays2 unit really does a good job of keeping the rear axle in the straight portion of the watts link "curve".
I have run the Saleen unit with the much longer arms though it was diff mounted. I also ran the Fays and just found the handling to be a bit twitchy. I really preferred how the Saleen unit worked. A lot! I attributed the difference to the arm length.
A diff-mounted Watts link forces all of the change in rear LLT to occur through the springs/shocks/bar, which will take a little more time to happen than going directly through the primary means of lateral axle location without any suspension movement being required. Also, the diff-mounted Watts link appears to have a fractionally slower rate of change in roll steer (change in % vs change in ride height). Probably subliminal stuff as far as identifying what's happening, but that doesn't mean you might not feel differences in what's going on.I have run the Saleen unit with the much longer arms though it was diff mounted. I also ran the Fays and just found the handling to be a bit twitchy. I really preferred how the Saleen unit worked. A lot! I attributed the difference to the arm length.
I'm not sure what is to be gained by going to longer arms. I'm pretty sure the Fays2 unit will stay vertical in travel until the rear shocks either get damaged from extension or damaged from compression/axle hitting frame. The tall football on the Fays2 unit really does a good job of keeping the rear axle in the straight portion of the watts link "curve".