The Haynes went to her new owner yesterday :(
The End.
MX5 Haynes Roadster
Saturday 26 March 2016
Monday 7 April 2014
Wakey wakey rise and shine!
The Haynes was rudely awaken from it's hibernation last week and put back on the road.
Grins were a plenty, I'd almost forgotten how awesome it is to drive :D
In actual fact it didn't get that much of a rest over winter. The oil consumption had been getting silly towards the end of last year - something like a litre every 100 miles...
My best guess was that worn/tired/gummed up oil rings were the cause (reasonably common on the MX5) so I treated it to a full engine rebuld over winter with new piston rings and bottom end / conrod bearings.
It's too early to tell whether the oil consumption is any better, but the engine feels nice and strong at least.
Fingers crossed for a long dry summer!
Grins were a plenty, I'd almost forgotten how awesome it is to drive :D
In actual fact it didn't get that much of a rest over winter. The oil consumption had been getting silly towards the end of last year - something like a litre every 100 miles...
My best guess was that worn/tired/gummed up oil rings were the cause (reasonably common on the MX5) so I treated it to a full engine rebuld over winter with new piston rings and bottom end / conrod bearings.
It's too early to tell whether the oil consumption is any better, but the engine feels nice and strong at least.
Fingers crossed for a long dry summer!
Saturday 14 December 2013
Time for bed...
Haven't used the Haynes much over the last couple of months.
Managed to get out on a couple of rare rain free days recently, but discovered light rear wheel drive cars, rubbish donor tyres, and cold/damp roads do not a good combination make.
Unless of course you like going sideways everywhere, even when you're not trying to!
That and the fact my tax runs out in a couple of weeks time means she'll be tucked up in the garage till spring now whilst I save up for some decent tyres.
Managed to get out on a couple of rare rain free days recently, but discovered light rear wheel drive cars, rubbish donor tyres, and cold/damp roads do not a good combination make.
Unless of course you like going sideways everywhere, even when you're not trying to!
That and the fact my tax runs out in a couple of weeks time means she'll be tucked up in the garage till spring now whilst I save up for some decent tyres.
Saturday 31 August 2013
Spring Rates
When I first ordered my shocks and springs I went with the springs rates suggested by NTS:
400lbs/inch front
250lbs/inch rear
Initially these felt ok, but the more I drove, and the more confident I got, the more clearer it became that something wasn't right with the handling...
I found that the ride was pretty poor on bumpy roads (and we have a lot of bumpy roads round here...), and I was getting jolted about all over the place.
More importantly though, the car had disasterous understeer when pushed to the limits of grip.
It was very difficult to get the tail out, and when I did it'd very quickly switch between under and oversteer resulting in some funky handling.
Another indication that something wasn't right was that the tyres squealed like a pig going round tight corners, even when I wasn't pushing it hard.
After spending a while playing with ride heights, damper settings, camber, and toe, and not getting anywhere I decided to do a bit of research on spring rates.
A good starting point seemed to be to calulcate the wheel frequency (using the Allan Staniforth method in his book Competition Car Suspension - great book by the way!).
My calculations were full of measurement errors, estimates, and assumptions, but I figured they'd still give me a reasonably good idea of what was going on.
The calculations suggested my wheel frequencies were around 130cpm on the front and 100cpm on the rear.
Staniforth suggests 80-100 cpm for a sportscar and 100-125 for a race car. He also suggests that the rear should be slightly higher than the front to enable it to catch up with the front over bumpy surfaces.
So that might explain a few things then!
At that point I decided to work through the calculations the other way to see what sort of spring rates I might actually want to start with.
After playing around I came to the conclusion that the rear needed to be around 100lbs higher than the front and that a good starting point would be 300lbs on the front and 400lbs on the rear, giving 115cpm front, and 130cpm rear.
As a quick and dirty test I decided to swap the front and rear springs giving me 250 on the front and 400 on the rear.
I've had it set like this for a few days and it's much much better! The fronts does feel a tad soft, but the tyre squeal and understeer have been eliminated, she feels far more composed on bumpy ground, and as an added bonus the front seems far less prone to locking under heavy breaking.
It's probably gone a little far the other way and is slightly tail happy now, but it's more fun like that :)
I still think 300 front / 400 rear will give a good balance and started looking for a new set of springs for the front.
I managed to find a pair of 325lb springs secondhand (but unused) for less than half the price of a pair of new 300lb springs and will hopefully get time to fit them next week.
That should still keep it slightly biassed towards the rear assuming my calculations aren't too far out!
I'll let you know how I get on.
----------------------------------------
UPDATE 30/09/2013:
I've been out a few times with the current spring rates (325lbs front / 400lbs rear), and I'm reasonably happy with them now. I'm certainly in no rush to change them again!
The car feels fairly well balanced front to rear now and goes into a nice controllable oversteer when provoked, which is what I was aiming for :)
The only thing I would say is that the ride is possibly a little too hard for some of the dodgy roads I drive on, and I *might* think about fitting softer springs next year.
400lbs/inch front
250lbs/inch rear
Initially these felt ok, but the more I drove, and the more confident I got, the more clearer it became that something wasn't right with the handling...
I found that the ride was pretty poor on bumpy roads (and we have a lot of bumpy roads round here...), and I was getting jolted about all over the place.
More importantly though, the car had disasterous understeer when pushed to the limits of grip.
It was very difficult to get the tail out, and when I did it'd very quickly switch between under and oversteer resulting in some funky handling.
Another indication that something wasn't right was that the tyres squealed like a pig going round tight corners, even when I wasn't pushing it hard.
After spending a while playing with ride heights, damper settings, camber, and toe, and not getting anywhere I decided to do a bit of research on spring rates.
A good starting point seemed to be to calulcate the wheel frequency (using the Allan Staniforth method in his book Competition Car Suspension - great book by the way!).
My calculations were full of measurement errors, estimates, and assumptions, but I figured they'd still give me a reasonably good idea of what was going on.
The calculations suggested my wheel frequencies were around 130cpm on the front and 100cpm on the rear.
Staniforth suggests 80-100 cpm for a sportscar and 100-125 for a race car. He also suggests that the rear should be slightly higher than the front to enable it to catch up with the front over bumpy surfaces.
So that might explain a few things then!
At that point I decided to work through the calculations the other way to see what sort of spring rates I might actually want to start with.
After playing around I came to the conclusion that the rear needed to be around 100lbs higher than the front and that a good starting point would be 300lbs on the front and 400lbs on the rear, giving 115cpm front, and 130cpm rear.
As a quick and dirty test I decided to swap the front and rear springs giving me 250 on the front and 400 on the rear.
I've had it set like this for a few days and it's much much better! The fronts does feel a tad soft, but the tyre squeal and understeer have been eliminated, she feels far more composed on bumpy ground, and as an added bonus the front seems far less prone to locking under heavy breaking.
It's probably gone a little far the other way and is slightly tail happy now, but it's more fun like that :)
I still think 300 front / 400 rear will give a good balance and started looking for a new set of springs for the front.
I managed to find a pair of 325lb springs secondhand (but unused) for less than half the price of a pair of new 300lb springs and will hopefully get time to fit them next week.
That should still keep it slightly biassed towards the rear assuming my calculations aren't too far out!
I'll let you know how I get on.
----------------------------------------
UPDATE 30/09/2013:
I've been out a few times with the current spring rates (325lbs front / 400lbs rear), and I'm reasonably happy with them now. I'm certainly in no rush to change them again!
The car feels fairly well balanced front to rear now and goes into a nice controllable oversteer when provoked, which is what I was aiming for :)
The only thing I would say is that the ride is possibly a little too hard for some of the dodgy roads I drive on, and I *might* think about fitting softer springs next year.
Thursday 15 August 2013
Back in one piece - with new diff mounts
Took me a bit longer than planned, but the car's just about back together after my little incident with the diff.
Picked up a very orange replacement diff from Porkchop over on the Haynes forum.
Got some solid ali mounts to replace the rubber ones in the diff arms. These were supplied by Stot on the Haynes forum.
Got my propshaft repaired by Northwest Propshafts. This is where most of the delay occured.
The rear UJ got quite a battering when the diff broke and needed replacing. Initially they thought they might be able to repair the UJ, but it turned out to be unrepairable. So what they did was replace the rear UJ with a stronger, rebuildable one, and replace the whole shaft leaving only the front UJ and splined bit that goes into the gearbox as original.
When it turned up it didn't mate with the diff, as the nut on the end of the diff got in the way... They arranged for a courrier to pick it up though, and a week later it came back, and thankfully fitted just fine.
The other thing I did was fabricate a new front mount for the diff. It's similar to the old one, but 'chunkier' and solid-mounts to the chassis rather than using the landrover mounts:
I'm not particularly happy with the current diff mounting arrangement, but I'm sure it's better than my last one and will hopefully get me through what's left of the summer!
Just waiting for the roads to dry out now so I can have a bit of a shake down run.
UPDATE:
I've done 50 or so miles over the last couple of days. It's still on one piece and I can't say I've noticed any additional vibration.
I do miss the old LSD though. Pulling away doesn't feel quite as brutal with the new open diff!
Picked up a very orange replacement diff from Porkchop over on the Haynes forum.
Got some solid ali mounts to replace the rubber ones in the diff arms. These were supplied by Stot on the Haynes forum.
Got my propshaft repaired by Northwest Propshafts. This is where most of the delay occured.
The rear UJ got quite a battering when the diff broke and needed replacing. Initially they thought they might be able to repair the UJ, but it turned out to be unrepairable. So what they did was replace the rear UJ with a stronger, rebuildable one, and replace the whole shaft leaving only the front UJ and splined bit that goes into the gearbox as original.
When it turned up it didn't mate with the diff, as the nut on the end of the diff got in the way... They arranged for a courrier to pick it up though, and a week later it came back, and thankfully fitted just fine.
The other thing I did was fabricate a new front mount for the diff. It's similar to the old one, but 'chunkier' and solid-mounts to the chassis rather than using the landrover mounts:
I'm not particularly happy with the current diff mounting arrangement, but I'm sure it's better than my last one and will hopefully get me through what's left of the summer!
Just waiting for the roads to dry out now so I can have a bit of a shake down run.
UPDATE:
I've done 50 or so miles over the last couple of days. It's still on one piece and I can't say I've noticed any additional vibration.
I do miss the old LSD though. Pulling away doesn't feel quite as brutal with the new open diff!
Tuesday 23 July 2013
Teething Troubles...
Well 650 miles in and I've gone and broken it:
Not sure whether the rubber mounts or the diff broke first, but either way it's back to the drawing board...
Not sure whether the rubber mounts or the diff broke first, but either way it's back to the drawing board...
Friday 12 July 2013
Road Registered
Didn't mention on my last post, but on the way home from IVA I stopped by Peterborough DVLA office.
A very helpful chap there went through the paperwork with me, took a payment for tax and application fee, and inspected the car.
Two working days later (Monday this week) I got a letter containing my reg number and tax disc!
I got an age-related J-reg plate which was nice.
Took the car out for a damn good thrashing Monday night, and have been commuting in it all this week. Loving the unusually balmy weather :D
A very helpful chap there went through the paperwork with me, took a payment for tax and application fee, and inspected the car.
Two working days later (Monday this week) I got a letter containing my reg number and tax disc!
I got an age-related J-reg plate which was nice.
Took the car out for a damn good thrashing Monday night, and have been commuting in it all this week. Loving the unusually balmy weather :D
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)