Jump to content

-=thrasher=-

Member
  • Posts

    7
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Reputation

0 Neutral

Contact Methods

  • Website URL
    http://
  • ICQ
    0

Profile Information

  • Location
    Bendigo, VIC
  • Interests
    See forum's DNS domain name.
  1. ..bear in mind if it comes to an insurance claim, if the insurance company wants to be difficult they could claim it as a 'modification' - if your car caught on fire (crash etc as happened to me, caught on fire apparently from tranny stick popping out and oil dumping on extractors) they could use this to claim damage to the wreck from your actions and possibly ask you to pay the difference. Unlikely as it is, I thought I should mention it. I had a family member's car in for repair (front-ended a towbar) and the assessor queried the repairer about why the air snorkel was missing - seriously! Other than that there's litttle reason to remove the shield from a vehicle with factory headers.. if anything it will increase heat damage to components nearby under extreme conditions (my extractors used to glow red-pink frequently )
  2. Zap, Habbib, appreciate your taking the time to respond. I was hoping for a substantial answer, those provided were solid as concrete. I guess it makes sense if you think like a project manager, and obviously the project-oriented approach is the bible in the mass car manufacturing industry. That said, we should be glad we have a car like the Falcon in Australia let alone 'boutique' versions like the Typhoon - given the world car market, it's amazing we have what we have. Maybe one day F6's and GT's will be a hot commodity, when all you can buy under $100k is pissy 2lt BMW's and front-wheel drive imports... Until then, (rant) all I can say is thank f k FMCA and Tickford shed themselves of all the grey-haired old cardigan-wearers in management (Howard Marsden was worth more than all of them put together), otherwise "performance" would still mean round-eye headlights, a bit of body bling and a red rocker cover with a fearsome 7kw extra (pfft valves, cam, CR, exhaust, ign/fuel maps, real rocket scientists they were) Hopefully with BFII I'll have the cash to splash to reward FPV for their vision and finally be able to stick it to the Ford critics around town! cheers
  3. I know it has ABS and TC, but as you know DSC is a different animal all together... (backstory) My interest comes as I lost $35k worth of XR6 after swerving around a large kangaroo near the speed limiter (resulting in 100m worth of fishtailing.. almost under control, till I ran out of road to play with). So I'm very interested in DSC. If that car had DSC I've no doubt it would still be in my driveway today, not to mention skipping a visit to hospital. So I don't ask as a tyrekicker who's sooking that it doesn't have the latest Three Letter Acronym bullsh1t technology, I'm asking if anyone can help me find out: 1) Why DSC isn't included on the F6? (yet is on the Turbo Territory) 2) If it's planned for future revisions of the F6? (and if so, when?) All they need to do then is bring back Gunmetal Grey, get rid of the ridiculous (and redundant) starter button , put a graph on the boost gauge, and I'm sold! That said, the F6 is a fantastic piece of machinery, even if it does cost you $90k by the time you tick the right boxes and put it on the road. I just hope that DSC and a few other improvements are made in the next revision. cheers
  4. Most people blame 'high' prices on the oil companies. WRONG. You know who makes the most profit out of petrol? IT'S THE GOVERNMENT! For every 70 litre tank (~$80) you're paying $35 in TAX! (at ~$1.20/l) In actual fact, it only costs about $45 to fill a 70 litre tank for the petrol. (That's not so bad, is it?) The grubby politicians then whack 38 cents a litre excise on. THEN comes the kicker - they add 10% to the total as GST! How's that - a tax on a tax. Love ya work, Johnny. So next time all the clever dicks go and vote Liberal and Labor at the next election, they'll be sealing us in to another couple of years worth of double-tax. The Greens love the taxes, if they had their way we'd all be riding down the quarter-mile, and cars would all be put in the crusher. So for God's sake, remember how p1ssed off you are when it comes time to vote. Every Independant or 'minor party' person that gets in is one more chance to rock the boat of the comfy Liberal/Labor pollies. They don't care about fuel prices, they usually get theirs paid for... BY US!
  5. If you're in Mexico and travelling the Calder, Bendigo is cheaper than Melb at the moment. $1.22 avg for ULP. Add standard margins for PULP pricing. The Shell/Coles outlets are usually the low-price benchmarks here. Remember, it's not the fuel that's expensive, it's the excise (and the GST on top of the excise!) What to do? Both major parties are addicted to the fuel excise revenue stream, make them both pay next time you vote... cheers
  6. I wouldn't complain about 22k. When in Melb I was on 10k front-to-back - swapping the new pair into the front and dumping the old rears for the old fronts. The short story is that long life and good traction are contrary to each other. Soft compounds grab better (adhesion from increased contact-patch surface area, result of the compound's surface conformance), but by their very nature they wear faster. The best you can do is compromise. Tread patterns (not the block sizes but the patterns) generally define the road noise and the water-dispersal of the tyre. The lips just before the mounting bead on some of the Dunlops are good if the missus drives the car sometimes. Usually silica is 'better' than normal C-base rubber. -Silica compounds always outperform conventional carbon-black based compounds in wet braking and handling. -They grip a *lot* better when cold than C-base compounds. -At equal wear resistance, silica grips better. This brings long life and good traction closer together. -C-base compounds tend to 'squeal' more. Silica generally makes a scraping or scratching sound. Great for driving hard without screeching and attracting unwanted attention. -Silica tyres are CRAP for burnouts. [but why buy a sticky, grippy tyre only to try and break traction?! ] They just shed crumbly dry rubber powder and don't melt - they don't leave very impressive marks. Under controlled conditions, naturally. You can check the compound type by burning a bit of the tyre with a lighter. A C-black tyre will go all gooey and sticky pretty quickly. A silica tyre will more dry-char and crumble. If your driving habits are sedate then this will be of little interest to you...this all assumes you drive your vehicle beyond 7/10th's regularly. Needless to say this requires you to maintain your vehicle's safety meticulously. (Some people let other people change their brake pads. Would *you* trust the pimply faced apprentice to recognize a fatigued caliper bolt a good stomp away from shearing? Don't laugh, caliper bolts DO shear. Not to mention the squealing brakes because they didn't understand what that orange sticky stuff is for. Or that they forgot to lube the slide pins.) Sorry, been a long day. When you start to push your rubber it often pays not to muck about rotating corner to corner (obviously unidirectionals will only rotate on the same side without flipping on the rim). Normally if you drive solidly your rears will tend to go first. Keep your best tyres on the front. This is for a number of reasons *Braking - obviously inertial weight transfer puts the front rubber 'under the pump'. Especially in marginal conditions (rain, loose surface) your front end is the end that lets you steer away from danger. With ABS, front grip in emergency braking can mean the difference between stopping safely on the gravel shoulder or ending up in a 100km/h head-on. *Understeer resistance - It's easy to recover from oversteer, but understeer is the effect part of cause-and-effect. This means with better shoes up front, you can push harder, deeper into corners, and lay down the power earlier on the way out without suffering push-plow. *Cornering/banking grip - the sensitive parts on the front pair are the shoulders. It's safer to hit banking turns hard when you have plenty of meaty compliant tread blocks (not too big+soft though as on cheapies) on the outside corner (being pushed onto them by centrifugal force on the vehicle). A mid-life tyre from the rear won't offer the same tenacious grab on the shoulders as a young performance tyre. Once the front lets go, you are stuffed. Rear slip can be modulated with throttle and controlled with countersteer. Anyway without writing a Mills 'N' Boon, that is what I have to offer. Some of the above is theory, in an attempt to understand the 'why is it so', but all of it is derived from my experience. I also like to run lower pressures, perhaps 32 depending on the weather. This chews out the tread quicker but reduces traction loss in the wet and helps fight understeer. Once day the late (and great) Howard Marsden made a comment on some track work they did, trying different pad and tyre combinations. He reckoned the grip got better the closer to 45 they got. I heard this at an XR club meet I was late for. I was a clever dick at 20 then, and having missed the introduction I piped up and said "That's not what I found! What sort of testing were you doing?" My mate tapped me on the shoulder and whispered "That's Howard Marsden..." Well I was gobsmacked - I had never seen Howard's face before, only heard the name. I think he was helping develop the AU XR6/8 then So with apologies for the sheer size of the post.. take it all with a grain of salt but I reckon go with a silica compound; watch the top-of-the-range tyres some have a lower tread depth for performance reasons; a rim protection bead if poss.; low pressures for heavy/wet work; DO NOT LET THEM USE CLAMP-IN BALANCE WEIGHTS (the tyre rotates on the rim sometimes under heavy braking.. this drags the weight and scratches the lip of the rim); not too wide as the steering geometry was designed with a limited range of shoe-sizes in mind. And Pirelli's are more reputation than substance - that's the tyre review consensus. I wasn't impressed with them in a Lotus Elise and an S2000 but that's was just seat of the pants, not an A-B comparo. And I had four Falken's for two days. I sold them back to the dealer at a loss of $200 they were that bad. The Dunlop FM901 was the best tyre I ever used, but was discontinued a while ago in the smaller diameters. The SP 3000A wasn't too bad though for a well-priced tyre. I have not used the DZ series of Dunlops, which are a street-legal race tyre. I nearly did but at the time sticker-shock stopped me. Talk to the guys at Stuckeys, http://www.stuckey.com.au/. They know their stuff pretty damn well. regards
  7. Ahh those shots were very good but they missed the number plate.. I think the plate speaks for itself! My interpretation is, buy FPV if: You're not a typical HSV d*ckhead who thinks because Brocky drove one, they can fly... FULLY SICK MATE!!
×
  • Create New...
'