Alfa Romeo/Alfa Romeo Digest Archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Launch techniques
Acceleration is limited by the grip of the tires. It is understood that
pneumatic tires generate maximum grip when rotational speed is 10 to 15 %
faster than freewheeling speed would be, i e the drive wheels need to slip
by about 10 to 15%and the speedometer reading would show 10 to 15% faster
than the actual speed of the car. I take this figure from the various
articles about how ABS works. The precise overspeed of the drive wheels
required is hard to describe in words but easy to feel in practice. You
feel the tires "hook up" as maximum traction is reached.
Acceleration is also limited by the torque available to drive those wheels
at that speed. Once you have generated the wheelspin I refer to, any more
torque produced by the drivetrain is wasted in heating the tires to no
effect, and indeed will result in less traction being generated for
acceleration. Generally, with an open differential and 2 wheel drive only
one tire will spin and that will be the tire that limits acceleration. Not
always though, I've noticed, as you can get both drive wheels to spin even
with an open differential if traction is very good.
Every car/tire/engine tune/weight combination will require different launch
techniques for maximum acceleration. Front wheel drive cars are a little
trickier to deal with because the weight comes off the drive wheels more
quickly as you accelerate more quickly so you must not continue to squeeze
down on the gas as acceleration picks up. Paradoxically, with fwd you need
to ease out of the gas as the tires hook up in order to maximize grip for
acceleration. More torque from the engine rarely translates to quicker
standing start acceleration times, but of course does improve roll on
acceleration times significantly.
Rear wheel drive with an open differential is much easier to handle as you
can really get into the throttle as soon as the tires begin to hook up,
confident that rear weight transfer will give those drive wheels more grip
as acceleration proceeds.
With an lsd both fwd and rwd become much easier to accelerate optimally
as one more variable is reduced.
All wheel drive vehicles require high levels of skill to accelerate due to
the phenomenal grip of all four wheels and the odd effects of weight
transfer. Essential to good acceleration for awd is a lsd center
differential, and a rear lsd helps a great deal also. Otherwise, what you
gain at the back is lost at the front.
Generally, maximizing launch with fwd will not involve any clutch
dropping as the key is to get those front tires hooked up and keep them
that way by reducing torque momentarily then getting the hammer down as
soon as traction stabilizes. This is not hard on the clutch. Dumping the
clutch either produces prodigious wheelspin which gets you nowhere, or bogs
the engine. Occasionally, on a one time basis only, there will be a loud
bang from the differential followed by very poor acceleration! Also, with a
turbo, shifting UP into a higher gear early is sometimes essential for
maximum acceleration if traction is less than perfect. My SAAB Aero
produces 252 lb ft of torque at 1,900 rpm and you simply cannot use that
torque driving only the front wheels (or wheel as is usually the case!).
Once rolling however, a SAAB Aero will run with some pretty expensive and
powerful machinery, and keep running with it to well over 100 mph. My 164
cannot overpower the front wheels on dry pavement so quick acceleration is
child's play: rev to about 2,500 and slip the clutch in while squeezing
more gas just as the tires begin to break loose, then drop the rest of the
clutch and stand on the gas. Reasonably effortless 0-60 times in the 8
second range are easily repeatable (slower at higher elevations of course).
Practice practice practice is the only way to find the best launch for your
vehicle with you in it.
Michael Smith
White 1991 164L
Original owner
--
to be removed from alfa, see /bin/digest-subs.cgi
or email "unsubscribe alfa" to [email protected]
Home |
Archive |
Main Index |
Thread Index