a couple weeks ago i did a beginners driving school at road america. 3 "drills" sessions, 3 classroom sessions and 1 "track" session on their kart track. my car is 2013 gt with 3.55 gears, LSD though not torsen, 18x8 factory wheels and wilwood fnsl6r front brakes with slotted rotors. pirelli all-seasons. nothing else changed. ended up with some ebc greenstuff pads in the front, factory rear pads and rbf600 fluid changed two weeks before the school.
this was the 1st time i ever pushed the mustang hard. for the year .5 that i owned it, and two track days (one in the rain), i feared rear wheel spin in any situation where the throttle was involved. well, the TD in the rain worried me. i guess that was the situation where it seemed like any throttle with the car even slightly turning it would break loose.
according to my factory accelerometer, i did 1.03g braking, .90 turning right, .88 left and .62 accelaration. as opposed to my 1st track day .66 brake, .78 right, .72 left and .37 accel. (with factory brakes up front at that time)
boy did i learn a lot. 1st this car is darn powerful in stock form. 2nd, the car is setup from the factory for the safety of understeer. but it's not a horrible understeer or at least it doesn't onset too fast and there's nothing you can do about it. another thing i learned is that you really have to at the right rpm level and mash the throttle to get the back end to kick out but it's easy to get it under control - i was fearing it would be like driving on ice and once it started you couldn't stop it. just a easy lift and steering correction and it snapped back into place.
another thing i learned was about weight transfer. wow did i learn that. on the kart track there was a strait burst up a little rise then down and hairpin to the right. i actually did enough laps that each time through that down/right i experimented with braking - first brake then turn, next brake deeper and start turning. finally i rode the brakes hard as i could all the way to apex. i could feel just how much more traction there was from being down hill and heavy nose dive. it was quite the experience.
so question: i have the soft factory suspension with lots of travel. does a stiffer suspension mean less weight transfer overall, or does it just mean a longer time for the weight to transfer?
everything in the classroom was great too, just about everything that is said in these forums for beginners, or that was said between runs at the two track days i did was repeated. ha, it's really starting to sink in.
other than that, perhaps the best thing i learned is, i really don't see myself changing anything on my car suspension wise until i get to be a better and smoother driver of this car. it does a lot and i'm just not there. that said, the whole possibility of burning off my factory brakes is why i did the wilwoods. which, at least for the drills and kart-track (akin to auto-x) held up really well!
another question: my factory brakes, the pedal got real mushy after only a few corners at my track day. i could push the pedal down a lot further than when everything was cold. as i went on, i could feel the brakes not grabbing as fast and not slowing me down as much. so - fluid and pads right? (this is not yet my question) with the wilwoods, greenstuffs and rbf600 and the drills we went through plus the laps on the kart track, i could definitely feel like i could push the pedal down a little more as things got hotter. with the pads, i think it was almost the same as "cold" throughout, meaning i felt like i still had the same amount of braking available and i could hit the abs every corner right up to the end. so... my question then is this: even though you have better fluid like rbf600 and even though you have better pads (higher temp) do even race pads and fluids feel softer as you work them hard?
finally in case anyone is new and wondering, geez do an auto-x or driving school so you can push your car and drive like an idiot and learn it safely! before doing track days where there's a higher chance of danger. plus, there's WAY too much performance in a stock mustang for the street to handle you'd get arrested for sure or worse kill someone.
this was the 1st time i ever pushed the mustang hard. for the year .5 that i owned it, and two track days (one in the rain), i feared rear wheel spin in any situation where the throttle was involved. well, the TD in the rain worried me. i guess that was the situation where it seemed like any throttle with the car even slightly turning it would break loose.
according to my factory accelerometer, i did 1.03g braking, .90 turning right, .88 left and .62 accelaration. as opposed to my 1st track day .66 brake, .78 right, .72 left and .37 accel. (with factory brakes up front at that time)
boy did i learn a lot. 1st this car is darn powerful in stock form. 2nd, the car is setup from the factory for the safety of understeer. but it's not a horrible understeer or at least it doesn't onset too fast and there's nothing you can do about it. another thing i learned is that you really have to at the right rpm level and mash the throttle to get the back end to kick out but it's easy to get it under control - i was fearing it would be like driving on ice and once it started you couldn't stop it. just a easy lift and steering correction and it snapped back into place.
another thing i learned was about weight transfer. wow did i learn that. on the kart track there was a strait burst up a little rise then down and hairpin to the right. i actually did enough laps that each time through that down/right i experimented with braking - first brake then turn, next brake deeper and start turning. finally i rode the brakes hard as i could all the way to apex. i could feel just how much more traction there was from being down hill and heavy nose dive. it was quite the experience.
so question: i have the soft factory suspension with lots of travel. does a stiffer suspension mean less weight transfer overall, or does it just mean a longer time for the weight to transfer?
everything in the classroom was great too, just about everything that is said in these forums for beginners, or that was said between runs at the two track days i did was repeated. ha, it's really starting to sink in.
other than that, perhaps the best thing i learned is, i really don't see myself changing anything on my car suspension wise until i get to be a better and smoother driver of this car. it does a lot and i'm just not there. that said, the whole possibility of burning off my factory brakes is why i did the wilwoods. which, at least for the drills and kart-track (akin to auto-x) held up really well!
another question: my factory brakes, the pedal got real mushy after only a few corners at my track day. i could push the pedal down a lot further than when everything was cold. as i went on, i could feel the brakes not grabbing as fast and not slowing me down as much. so - fluid and pads right? (this is not yet my question) with the wilwoods, greenstuffs and rbf600 and the drills we went through plus the laps on the kart track, i could definitely feel like i could push the pedal down a little more as things got hotter. with the pads, i think it was almost the same as "cold" throughout, meaning i felt like i still had the same amount of braking available and i could hit the abs every corner right up to the end. so... my question then is this: even though you have better fluid like rbf600 and even though you have better pads (higher temp) do even race pads and fluids feel softer as you work them hard?
finally in case anyone is new and wondering, geez do an auto-x or driving school so you can push your car and drive like an idiot and learn it safely! before doing track days where there's a higher chance of danger. plus, there's WAY too much performance in a stock mustang for the street to handle you'd get arrested for sure or worse kill someone.