Mini Mad wrote:
The bump stops aren't just a hard big lump of rubber that the car sits on, but a progressive aeon spring which gives the car better turn in.
Coil-Springs are a personal thing, for me it's a unique feature to the mini that makes it a mini. They won Monte-Carlo/Bathurst with the Hydro setup and certainly handling isn't one of the things someone comments on negatively about a mini in the first place so why change a good thing?
they won Monte-Carlo/Bathurst with a 1275 eng. Well why are you putting another engine into a mini.
The suspension has absolutely zip to do with a car's ability to" turn into a corner" This is controlled by the akerman turn of the front wheels. a increase in toe-out does this,but you have to make sure it's the correct wheel that is getting toe-out. IE if you are going around a RH corner ,then the inside wheel[RH] has to turn more than the out-side wheel [two different radius of a circle] This is controlled by the arc that the steering arm is travelling thru during suspension movement.
It's the same with hard braking, toe-in gives stability and toe-out helps to iniate the turn.
Put a set of suspension trammels onto a mini suspension and do all the measurements on the wheels ie camber,toe settings, when the car is going thru the body roll, suspension travel ,turning etc etc and look at what the wheels are doing.
When you have done that with your mini and understand the principles of suspension design you might get a shock.
Rembember minis were built on a retail price budget and were designed for a cheap car for mum and dad to use.
I agree that minis do go around corners better than some other cars,but they are far from perfect. If they were perfect then you would see rubber cone or hydrolastic mini suspension on formula 1 cars
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