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nick47

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Posts posted by nick47

  1. This sounds like a lot of fun. I'm not sure my 45-year-old car would be up for the whole tour, but a NorCal start would definitely get me out for the first few legs.

  2.  

    This is my car and the dead pedal works great. You just need that small tab under the arch of your foot and you can put your full weight on it. I've adjusted it forward a little so that I can just feel the clutch pedal under the ball of my foot during normal driving. Moving from the dead pedal to the clutch is effortless and there is no danger of getting a foot stuck under anything. 200-mile cruises are very comfortable, and the pedal even works for bracing myself in turns.

  3. In all of NorCal, the East Bay probably has the worst sports car roads. Mostly too much traffic. Much better 40 years ago. My favorite back then was Redwood Road, Pinehurst, Skyline, and Grizzly Peak. Also Bear Creek between Martinez and Orinda.

     

    There are a lot of great bike roads in the area.

  4. I don't think you can do this by pros and cons. It's more of an emotional decision. You're either a V8 guy or not. If you like the sound of V8s and you can't have enough horsepower, that's what you should have. I grew up around I4s and never needed gobs of horsepower to have fun in a car, so long as it whips through the turns. The only V8 car I ever owned was a '72 Pantera, and I have to admit I felt kind of embarassed every time I mashed the pedal.

  5. I would only think you'd need suspension mods if you're competing. The handling and sheer cornering power of these things is already way beyond anything else on the road, except another 7. You can corner so much faster than anyone expects, it can sometimes get you into trouble. Power, same deal, although that's at least something other drivers can relate to.

  6. Draw the vectors for gravity and cornering force from the C.G. and add them up. If the vector falls outside the tires, the car will roll. Inside, it won't.

     

    That's a static example. In real life you could probably do something stupid that would change the dynamics. That's probably more likely with something stiffly sprung. I've rolled go-karts, so I know what can happen when you do something stupid in an unsprung vehicle.

     

    Stiffening the suspension alone doesn't make the car that much more likely to roll, except possibly for the reduced camber compensation, which would ordinarily slightly increase the track.

  7. Getting off the brakes moves weight to the rear wheels, not the front. Sometimes a tap on the front brakes can get you a little more front end grip, or just trail-brake all the way in. Definitely stomping on the gas will unload the fronts, and you'd like to have most of your turning done before that.

     

    If you're in the middle of one of the eights and still understeering, the classic fix is lower front spring rates or stiffer rear.

     

    In autocross you're in transition most of the time, so you can make big changes through shock adjustments. There are some rules of thumb but it's mostly trial and error depending on the car and the course.

  8. Congratulations, Manshoon! It's all downhill from here.

     

    Gherkin, I think they've changed the way they do it. The DMV told me the certificate will come in the mail from Sacramento. What the DMV gave me was my registration application back with the sequence number written at the top, a couple of other numbers, and a date stamp. They also gave me an operating permit good through February. So I've insured the car and I'm driving it legally right now. Well, not right now because I'm at the computer, but you know.

     

    My experience was, the CHP assigned the VIN. It's permanent, it's on the car, and it's on all the printed forms I got back from the DMV. Next stop is the BAR, but I'm waiting until I get my actual certificate until I do that.

     

    Manshoon, did you get a temporary operating permit?

  9. I just think that the government has grown so big that they cant see past themselves. They are so detached from reality. Even if they MIGHT have good intentions they just can't manage to enact those intentions with out mucking it up in some way.

    There are well-meaning people in government. There are very intelligent people in government. There are even very capable people in government. But there's also way too much money, and no concerns about return on investment, and that brings out the worst. I've seen it too many times.

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