optronix
Senior Member
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2023
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 685
- Reaction score
- 1,016
- Location
- Mid-Atlantic
- Vehicle(s)
- 2024 Integra Type S, 2023 Macan GTS
Hey man, some of us love our cone crap.I did springs because of how they look, period, I was never expecting any performance, specially with the H&Rs which are softer in the front, stiffer in the back. Car actually felt better but I think that was placebo or the extra negative camber up front.
I think its fine to want the car to look good, looking good makes you go faster lol. I have noticed nothing. negative so far from the H&Rs, honestly car drives exactly the same if not better (again placebo, but not worst). I also got a DSC to replace the ITS module. I actually though thought the ITS is better in sport on the street as its a bit too stiff in sport compared to ITS so I guess I will have to go to comfort on the street, however +R is fantastic on the DSC, a good improvement over the ITS imo, car feels more responsive to me... but of course I did so much stuff at the same time that I am not sure its the springs, camber or DSC (I installed springs and camber then DSC but just took car to lime rock auto cross and had everything installed then, I did not get to have a time to compared to last year unfortunately, I will next month and see how all this upgrades fair since LRP auto cross is always the same course, no cone crap)
No seriously, I love that autocross is different any given day you show up. Part of its appeal. Also I don't have to worry about insurance, brakes are not really a wear item concern, and the cost of entry is super low vs HPDE/TT.
The work-half-the-day thing I can see could be a deal-breaker for some folks...
But back on topic, the other thing about autocross in particular- the hyper-aggressive low speed cornering instantly reveals understeer. And I had a great benchmark of going from OEM settings one month, to post-springs settings the next month. And it was a startling contrast. I don't want to oversell the impact- it was JUST subtle enough during the early runs to where I was asking myself if I was just having an off day... but as the day progressed and I got more familiar with the course and more aggressive, it was undeniable. The car wasn't behaving the same it was the last time I was out.
I just had this discussion with someone (maybe even in this thread, tough to keep up), where they didn't notice the understeer during their track day after installing Spoon springs and their lap times actually improved- but also with the concession that they were novice drivers and just gaining skill and confidence rapidly. I think honestly in that setting some additional understeer may not just be less noticeable, but a possible advantage. This platform rotates very well. For someone getting to know the car and their own driving, I could see getting into a prickly situation coming in a little hot through a corner and having to learn very quickly what lift-off oversteer actually means. A little more negative camber in the rear than the front might actually help with that... but my only concern then would be in predictability. Then we start diving into the roll center geometry and things like that...
I think overall this platform is pretty forgiving and the springs on the market do not introduce a huge change in the overall geometry... but I'm here to tell you that for autocross applications in particular, you are definitely better off leaving it the way it is from the factory unless you are also prepared to address the camber issues that are introduced when you lower the car.
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