siskue2005 wrote:hello guys,
i wanted to add a rear wing on my Chevy cruze....but the sho guy told me its not going to help in a front wheel driven car!
is it true? as i think no matter where the drives are will it not give aero benefit in a corner?
will it not stabilze my rear end?
or will it give me extra drag and low fuel economy?
Thank you
xpensive wrote:siskue2005 wrote:hello guys,
i wanted to add a rear wing on my Chevy cruze....but the sho guy told me its not going to help in a front wheel driven car!
is it true? as i think no matter where the drives are will it not give aero benefit in a corner?
will it not stabilze my rear end?
or will it give me extra drag and low fuel economy?
Thank you
In order to make your FWD perfectly balanced with the xtra downforce, you might find it worthwhile to rip a page out of Jim Hall's book, again.
http://jayfields.freeserverhost.net/Can ... 07w/43.htm
Lurk wrote:@Lycoming : less than 8:08 at the Ring, 14s less than the 2nd best FWD car.
xpensive wrote:siskue2005 wrote:hello guys,
i wanted to add a rear wing on my Chevy cruze....but the sho guy told me its not going to help in a front wheel driven car!
is it true? as i think no matter where the drives are will it not give aero benefit in a corner?
will it not stabilze my rear end?
or will it give me extra drag and low fuel economy?
Thank you
In order to make your FWD perfectly balanced with the xtra downforce, you might find it worthwhile to rip a page out of Jim Hall's book, again.
http://jayfields.freeserverhost.net/Can ... 07w/43.htm
bill shoe wrote:Lurk wrote:@Lycoming : less than 8:08 at the Ring, 14s less than the 2nd best FWD car.
This implies the Renault is ~ 1 second per km quicker. This is a moderately small difference. Tire grip makes more difference than that.
Tire grip is largely a function of how much tire wear and rolling resistance the manufacturer is willing to tolerate on that particular car. Subaru or Mazda may fit their hot hatches with relatively ordinary production car tires while Renault fits this “race-only” model with track tires.
Also, the fact that the Renault uses tires with the name “Bridgestone 050?” does not mean those tires have any relationship to other tires with that name (except for tread styling). OE tire fitments are typically custom developments with a familiar name on the sidewall. I don’t know if the Renault tires in question are custom development or if they are actually similar to other tires of the same name that are fitted to other cars.
Anyway, if you want a good production FWD car to go 1 sec/km faster then worry about the tires, not which car you have.
I agree with everyone who says the wing is a functional loser on the street. However, I've also been curious to feel the on-track difference for a car with and without a significant rear wing. It would be interesting to feel the difference (grip, stability?). The wing could be justified out of human curiosity rather than performance vs cost.
Pieoter wrote:In what way is the 265 a race only vehicle?
The Mégane Renaultsport 265 Trophy Limited Edition is a race version of the street vehicle, Mégane Renaultsport 250 Cup. To improve its 0-60mph performance, reduction in weight has been achieved by removing equipment, such as climate control (air conditioning remains as standard), tyre pressure monitor, exterior Renaultsport styling, rear armrests, electrically adjustable drivers seat and heated front seats. The reduction in weight has enabled the new limited edition Mégane Renaultsport 265 Trophy to set a new benchmark time for a production-specification front-wheel drive car at the Nürburgring’s infamous Nordschleife circuit. This performance beats the attempts of several far more powerful, rear-wheel drive cars
bill shoe wrote:Pieoter wrote:In what way is the 265 a race only vehicle?
I confess I don't know anything about this car. However, Renault has the impression that it's a race version--The Mégane Renaultsport 265 Trophy Limited Edition is a race version of the street vehicle, Mégane Renaultsport 250 Cup. To improve its 0-60mph performance, reduction in weight has been achieved by removing equipment, such as climate control (air conditioning remains as standard), tyre pressure monitor, exterior Renaultsport styling, rear armrests, electrically adjustable drivers seat and heated front seats. The reduction in weight has enabled the new limited edition Mégane Renaultsport 265 Trophy to set a new benchmark time for a production-specification front-wheel drive car at the Nürburgring’s infamous Nordschleife circuit. This performance beats the attempts of several far more powerful, rear-wheel drive cars
http://www.gtplanet.net/forum/showthread.php?p=5486898



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