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2004-09-02, 03:47 PM | #1 |
EJ18
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Reno, NV
Posts: 99
Car: '04 Porsche Turbo X50, '05 STi, '05 Evo MR, '02 Ducati 998, '02 Ducati MH900e
love the quote "Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum"
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Another '05 STi article...
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2004-09-02, 03:48 PM | #2 |
Captain Turbo
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Reno
Posts: 3,318
Car: 05 STi
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2004-09-02, 03:54 PM | #3 | |
EJ18
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Reno, NV
Posts: 99
Car: '04 Porsche Turbo X50, '05 STi, '05 Evo MR, '02 Ducati 998, '02 Ducati MH900e
love the quote "Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum"
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Quote:
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2004-09-02, 04:00 PM | #4 |
The Doink
Real Name: Scott Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Portland, OR
Posts: 20,335
Car: '09 OBXT, '02 WRX, '96 Miata
Class: PDX/TT-6
The way out is through
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Um, that's for the euro-spec STi.... I'm still interested in some definitive white-paper type info on the '05 US STi having something other than the latteral-G sensor that the '04 already has.
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2004-09-02, 11:34 PM | #5 | |
EJ18
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Reno, NV
Posts: 99
Car: '04 Porsche Turbo X50, '05 STi, '05 Evo MR, '02 Ducati 998, '02 Ducati MH900e
love the quote "Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum"
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Quote:
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2004-09-02, 11:42 PM | #6 |
EJ18
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Reno, NV
Posts: 99
Car: '04 Porsche Turbo X50, '05 STi, '05 Evo MR, '02 Ducati 998, '02 Ducati MH900e
love the quote "Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum"
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Tried to attach the VDC Reference booklet but it wouldn't accept it... It's 4.2 MB.
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2004-09-03, 09:00 AM | #7 |
The Doink
Real Name: Scott Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Portland, OR
Posts: 20,335
Car: '09 OBXT, '02 WRX, '96 Miata
Class: PDX/TT-6
The way out is through
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If all this stuff is in the STi, I'm surprised Subaru isn't pushing it in the sales literature.
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2004-09-03, 11:46 AM | #8 |
EJ22T
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Reno
Posts: 9,445
Car: '93/'01 GF6, mostly red
Class: 19 FP
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Both of those documents refer to the "yaw-rate and lateral G sensor." I'm still not convinced it's not just the lateral G sensor with a new name.
Also, VDC is apparently just traction control, 99% of which ysstems result in slower lap times. It does seem to counteract both over steer and understeer, so maybe it's better than most. I can say for certain though that it's not an equivalent to the Evo's AYC.
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FWD is the new AWD |
2004-09-03, 06:07 PM | #9 | |
EJ18
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Reno, NV
Posts: 99
Car: '04 Porsche Turbo X50, '05 STi, '05 Evo MR, '02 Ducati 998, '02 Ducati MH900e
love the quote "Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum"
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Quote:
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2004-09-05, 03:42 PM | #10 |
EJ22T
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Reno
Posts: 9,445
Car: '93/'01 GF6, mostly red
Class: 19 FP
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You're confusing banned Formula 1 traction control systems with the kind of traction control Federalized, street-legal vehicles get. I will hold out for the possibility that the new VDC may have the ability to improve traction for motorsports purposes, but mostly it's so people don't get the "I have AWD, I'm INVINCIBLE!!!1!1!!!!" mentality in the winter and plow into curbs, cars, farm animals, and lakes.
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FWD is the new AWD |
2004-09-05, 11:28 PM | #11 | |
EJ18
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Reno, NV
Posts: 99
Car: '04 Porsche Turbo X50, '05 STi, '05 Evo MR, '02 Ducati 998, '02 Ducati MH900e
love the quote "Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum"
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Quote:
Taken from the FIA web-site... Although built to perform slightly different purposes - in ordinary cars ensuring stability under everyday use, in Formula One delivering the maximum amount of power to the road at all times - the fundamental principles remain very similar. Formula One cars are massively powerful. Even with the grip of modern racing tyres and the assistance of aerodynamic downforce, they are still capable of 'breaking traction' or developing wheelspin up to very high speeds, especially under the loads imposed by cornering. This is inefficient, slows the car down and can damage tyres. Traction control therefore gives drivers a competitive advantage. To understand traction control it is best to consider the 'traction circle'. The tyres of a Formula One car, like any car, can only offer a certain amount of grip. This can be the longitudinal grip used for braking and accelerating in a straight line, or the lateral grip required for cornering - or a combination of the two. Judging the exact 'mixture' of acceleration and cornering grip that can be extracted from the tyre is one of the hardest tasks faced by a racing driver - too much will result in a 'power slide', too little will see the car putting in a slow time. And it is in this that traction control is of the greatest assistance to drivers. Not that traction control gets rid of the need for driver skill. The highly 'aggressive' systems on a Formula One car will allow a car to operate very close to the edges of the tyre's capability. But simply travelling around every corner on full throttle would have a very serious impact on the tyres' life and require more frequent pit stops. Discretion is still called for. Traction control is not new to Formula One motorsport. It has been around in various guises since the 1980s, and cars like the 1992 Williams-Renault FW14-B which took Nigel Mansell to his Driver's Championship title were even more electronic-packed than the current cars - featuring computer controlled active suspension in addition. After a long period during which traction control was banned, the FIA decided to re-allow its use at the start of the 2002 season as it was becoming increasingly difficult to prove that ECUs (Engine Control Units) were not being used to replicate traction control functions. As with systems on road cars, Formula One traction control works by a comparison of wheel and track speeds, the information gathered by electronic sensors. If the wheel is travelling quicker than the road it is passing over then the engine will be progressively throttled back to prevent wheelspin. Until recently the system was also vital to the 'launch control' mechanism which allowed drivers to make optimum starts. This has been outlawed for the 2004 season. The role of traction control in Formula One racing is an ongoing source of debate, with critics arguing that driver skill alone should regulate the amount of power transferred to a car’s rear wheels. However, others have argued that any ban on such systems would be difficult or impossible to police and traction control remains legal for 2004. |
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2004-09-05, 11:38 PM | #12 | |
EJ22T
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Reno
Posts: 9,445
Car: '93/'01 GF6, mostly red
Class: 19 FP
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You completely missed my point- I know all about the banned traction control systems. What I was saying is that any USDM production-car traction control is NOT designed for faster laptimes- it's designed for fewer crashes. The STi in showrooms now *might* be faster with the VDC active, but I will believe that when a professional driver goes around a racetrack faster with it than without it. That has nothing to do with competition systems.
Read the first line of my last post again: Quote:
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FWD is the new AWD |
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2004-09-06, 02:34 PM | #13 | ||
EJ18
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Reno, NV
Posts: 99
Car: '04 Porsche Turbo X50, '05 STi, '05 Evo MR, '02 Ducati 998, '02 Ducati MH900e
love the quote "Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum"
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Quote:
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2004-09-06, 07:50 PM | #14 |
EJ205
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Truckee
Posts: 1,948
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Faster,Better, More!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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2004-09-06, 09:54 PM | #15 | |
The Doink
Real Name: Scott Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Portland, OR
Posts: 20,335
Car: '09 OBXT, '02 WRX, '96 Miata
Class: PDX/TT-6
The way out is through
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Quote:
Plus, the way the TC works on the new STi seems to use braking to create yaw moments (rather than L/R torque split like the EVO's AYC). Braking is never the ideal way to control a car at the limits of traction. I can imagine a system like that applying the brakes during a high speed sweeper that would put the rear-end of the car in front of the nose... and I'll guarentee that spinning is not the fast way around any race track. The bottom line is that the system in the STi is not designed for at the limit race driving, it's designed for street use. I bet an experienced race driver with all the ABS and TC turned off will destroy the lap times of an experienced street driver with all the aides turned on. The only time TC and ABS are really advantageous in racing is when the systems are specifically designed for racing. And like most things, what's good on the race track isn't all that good for the street... race brake pads, race suspension, race tires, etc. all make a car more dangerous on the street.
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2004-09-07, 07:27 AM | #16 | |
EJ207
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: 39n53, 119w90
Posts: 2,698
Car: RX-8
Class: CS maybe
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Quote:
I know on an autocross course, my laptimes are slower with TC on. It's possible this is not the case on a road course - I'll have to see what the RX drivers are saying on the other boards. |
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2004-09-07, 07:40 AM | #17 |
El Matador
Real Name: Matt Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Reno, NV
Posts: 10,660
Car: 2012 Toyota Tacoma
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In an unrelated/ related note...Saturday, I ran one run at autocross with my diff set at "open/rear"...Can you guess which one it was? It really does effect how quickly the car snaps around a turn.
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2004-09-08, 07:51 PM | #18 |
n00b
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: stead navada
Posts: 16
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sti fo evah
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i feel the need, the need for... wasting evos |
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