Rear aligment
Does that panhard bar bolt to the center of the axle??The pivot point is the same as the axle itself? It will bind quite a bit otherwise, and result in a rapid spring rate rise.
Is this to keep toe in or toe out , with travel? I think that it will add some dynamic camber, with load, but very little.
It may work best, tied to the other wheel bottom.
I have loaded these axles up, on my front end machine, and found very little flex @ 1000# of load.
I started developing the rear steer about three years ago, with my Son's solo car. It worked so well, that I have used it on our 3/8mile, circle burner, and IT car( and customer setups). The dynamics, when the rear tire tracks well outside the front tire, are outstanding. Think of a three legged stool. Try to tip it over, pushing against the widest three points, and than along the narrow direction. The change in effort is substantial. The VW is the same as a three legged stool!!. The more that the rear tire is outside of the front tire, the more effort it takes to tip it over.
The dynamics result in more inside front tire load, less outside front load, lower inside rear tire, more load on outside rear tire. More rear tire load means that I can use less rear spring, to get the same turn it feel, along with more grip.
I am trying to envision a "panhard " bar to add to this rear steer, for the road race cars. I can only come up with a "traction" bar, to the rear of the car. This would pull the axle back, upon deflection,but not side load.
Has anyone come up with a side load sensitive system??
The ultra soft bushings are where I am at right now. It works well,but I would like more control of the axle and more high tech stuff back there...
BTW, the circle track car set fast lap, and all of a sudden, all the front wheel drive cars had 1 in of rear toe out. It makes a huge difference with our rules, stock springs, 9in Goodyear slicks. The rear tracking about 10 in outside of the front , unloads the outside tire and adds drive to the inside front tire. Worth about 2tenths,on 17 sec.
MM