I've autocrossed in the past six years, just not in my car. After driving a handful of other cars I'm reminded that the Fiero is not an easy car to drive fast. I think 80% of this problem could be solved with quicker steering.
I looked like this:

Moderator: Series8217
Not sure what you mean by that. What I'm referring to is the number of turns lock to lock and the early and late cars are about the same. I don't want to ever take my hands off the wheel. The Fiero steering ratio is so slow that you have to.Dough19 wrote:The turning on the 88 front suspension does feel slower than the earlier suspension.
I did ok. About what I expected given my rustiness and hard tires. I wasn't running in class because they were running in the afternoon session. I had afternoon plans so I ran Time Only in the morning session. My time would have put me second in class, and it put me 36th of 99 overall entrants.Dough19 wrote:BTW How did you do overall??
Mineral Spirits?Chase Race wrote:It was fun. My old Victoracers even stuck OK after some treatment with the magic potion.
I've autocrossed in the past six years, just not in my car. After driving a handful of other cars I'm reminded that the Fiero is not an easy car to drive fast. I think 80% of this problem could be solved with quicker steering.
I looked like this:
... and the 88 rear camber issue rears its ugly head again.Chase Race wrote:
My 87GT just feels more responsive as you turn the wheel compared to the 88GT that I drove. It just seems to react faster. I guess it could have been due to a difference in caster between the two car though. I don't know.Chase Race wrote:Not sure what you mean by that. What I'm referring to is the number of turns lock to lock and the early and late cars are about the same. I don't want to ever take my hands off the wheel. The Fiero steering ratio is so slow that you have to.Dough19 wrote:The turning on the 88 front suspension does feel slower than the earlier suspension.
I did ok. About what I expected given my rustiness and hard tires. I wasn't running in class because they were running in the afternoon session. I had afternoon plans so I ran Time Only in the morning session. My time would have put me second in class, and it put me 36th of 99 overall entrants.Dough19 wrote:BTW How did you do overall??
But that's still too slow. Comparing to people I used to race against I figure I was about 2 seconds off pace compared to where I used to be. Results here: http://www.wwscc.org/event_results/2006/wwscc06-8.html
Chase Race wrote:It was fun. My old Victoracers even stuck OK after some treatment with the magic potion.
I've autocrossed in the past six years, just not in my car. After driving a handful of other cars I'm reminded that the Fiero is not an easy car to drive fast. I think 80% of this problem could be solved with quicker steering.
I looked like this:
Yep.Nemesis wrote:Mineral Spirits?
Ditto.Nemesis wrote:I'd love to have power steering just to have fewer turns of the wheel.
This isn't due to worn out rubber bushings, though. This is because of not enough camber gain to make up for body roll.Series8217 wrote:... and the 88 rear camber issue rears its ugly head again.
I know what you mean. I think it's a caster issue. My '88 GT (Aaron's car) had less caster and it seemed to turn in quicker and react faster. Still had to turn the wheel too far, though.Dough19 wrote:My 87GT just feels more responsive as you turn the wheel compared to the 88GT that I drove. It just seems to react faster. I guess it could have been due to a difference in caster between the two car though. I don't know.
They're fast cars and good drivers. I'm rooting for one of these guys to win Nationals.Dough19 wrote:I am surprized how well those Solstices did!!! I can't believe one got FTD.
Thanks John! Long time no talk. I hope you're still doing well.JohnW wrote:Your car still looks good though, since the last time I saw it back in '97.
John Williams
ES 51
88 Coupe/Formula
About 1.5 - 1.6 degrees negative on all four corners. Don't remember exactly.The Dark Side of Will wrote:Where your static camber settings, front and rear?
Aye, I was referring to the geometry issue.Chase Race wrote:This isn't due to worn out rubber bushings, though. This is because of not enough camber gain to make up for body roll.Series8217 wrote:... and the 88 rear camber issue rears its ugly head again.
Why would raising both inner pivots equally screw up the geometry? Lower the car 1", raise the pivots 1". Doesn't improve on stock geometry but you get the lower COG.The Dark Side of Will wrote:Well...
The toe link inner pivots are further apart than the lateral link inner pivots. This provides a slight amount of beneficial bump steer at stock ride height, but lower the car (bad) or raising the inner pivots (good) screws up that geometry.
Hmm.. if that's true then couldn't we just raise the lateral link inner pivots and move them slightly outward to get the same effect? That would be easy.The solution as I see it, is to give the toe link & lateral link inner pivots the same lateral separation. Once the pivots are raised, raising the lateral link pivot MORE than the toe link pivot will provide similar bump steer to stock, but better roll center characteristics.
I was thinking about that but was unsure of what difference it would make with regard to bump steer.One could also move the toe link IP's forward slightly so that the left one is between the CV joint and transmission case. Mount your powertrain firmly.