Setting up your B14 for track day duty
Through the past year, I've been doing a lot of experimentation with various suspension settings on my B14 track day car. Now that the season's over and I have nothing interesting to do, I thought I'd share some of my findings with you guys. It's a bit of a rough overview, but here goes:
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Ride Height
Finding a good workable ride height is annoying on a B14, so I'll tackle that first. If your car will never see a race track, your best bet is to keep your ride height as close to stock as you can. If not, you're in for a bit of fun. As inconvenient as it is with our limited damper travel and everything, the stock ride height is a bit too high for regular track use. The car is just too slow to react, and the amount of body roll and load transfer really throws you off.
In order to make the car really responsive on the track, you do need to lower the front end between 1.5” to 2”, and the rear by about 1”. This means you will need shortened dampers (Konis, Teins, etc) and polycellular bump stops. If your bump stops are longer than 40 mm, cut down the stiffer end. For those of you who may be setting up their cars for the lower end of the range, consider getting an adjustable bump steer kit for your car. Bolt in Bars sells a kit that doesn't require you to machine the hubs and has a wide range of adjustability.
This ride height setting is a bit more aggressive than what is traditionally recommended for our cars, and you will tap the bump stops over big bumps on the street. This is nowhere near bad enough to damage the suspension system though, and it will provide you with a bit of forward rake to help the car rotate through slower turns.
Springs and Antiroll Bars
The traditional recommendation for spring rates is to go with around 300 lbs-f/in for the front springs, and 15% to 20% less in the rear. In this range, I've found though that you can run band-aid some of the inherent handling of the cars by running rear springs that are just as stiff or even stiffer than the fronts. Running stiff rears makes the rear end take more of the roll force, which does three things:
I tend to use the antiroll bars to trim the car more than anything else, so I don't really run with big aftermarket bars. This is especially true up front, where I usually run either the stock 200sx front bar or no front bar at all. The rear end on the other hand is fairly forgiving of a big rear bar. A nice 20 mm bar may help the car rotate on a slow track or an autocross course.
Dampers
Shortened dampers, preferably with camber-adjustable top mounts are key. AGX’s can't really damp springs over 300lb-f/in, so again, it's Konis, Teins, or something of the similar. Surprisingly, Tein BASICs provide good bang for the buck here. Not only do they have pretty decent damping curves, they also share the same internals as the more expensive SS and FLEX (regular FLEX, not the Mono-FLEX), and are both rebuildable and revalvable.
Alignment
The first thing I recommend you do is to start doing your own alignments. Buy or build your own toe plate, camber plate, and go find a nice level surface to work on. Get yourself a good probe pyrometer as well. You'll need it to fine tune your alignment settings once you get out there.
If you're running street tyres on the track, I recommend starting with 0.2 deg toe in,2 deg negative camber, and as much caster as you can get (if you can get 4~5 degrees, you're pretty well off) up front. If you're on R compounds, try 0 deg toe-in, and closer to 2.5 deg negative camber up front.
Once you're out and running on the blacktop, use the pyrometer to fine tune your camber settings. Your tyres should show a nice even gradient, with the insides slightly hotter than the outsides by the time you get back to the paddock.
You can’t really do too much on the rear end of a B14. Just make sure your camber is within factory spec, and have the rear beam bent back for 0 deg toe-in.
These alignment settings are fairly streetable, but the negative camber will wear out the insides of your front tyres fairly quickly. I would recommend that you mark your camber plates at 1.25 deg negative camber, and set your car back to that mark when you get home from the track.
Bracing
I subscribe to the philosophy that you cannot have too stiff a chassis. At minimum, I would get both front and rear tower bars and a front lower tie bar. If you aren't planning to go wheel to go wheel to wheel with your car, filling your side rails with polyurethane foam will make a world of a difference - Just keep in mind that it isn't allowed in some race series, and that it can't be undone. A four point roll bar will also help stiffen the rear end substantially, even if it's just a bolt-in piece.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
That's the gist of it. The above setup should sort out some of the odd handling characteristics of the B14 chassis while still keeping it relatively streetable.
Questions, comments, and complaints are appreciated.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Ride Height
Finding a good workable ride height is annoying on a B14, so I'll tackle that first. If your car will never see a race track, your best bet is to keep your ride height as close to stock as you can. If not, you're in for a bit of fun. As inconvenient as it is with our limited damper travel and everything, the stock ride height is a bit too high for regular track use. The car is just too slow to react, and the amount of body roll and load transfer really throws you off.
In order to make the car really responsive on the track, you do need to lower the front end between 1.5” to 2”, and the rear by about 1”. This means you will need shortened dampers (Konis, Teins, etc) and polycellular bump stops. If your bump stops are longer than 40 mm, cut down the stiffer end. For those of you who may be setting up their cars for the lower end of the range, consider getting an adjustable bump steer kit for your car. Bolt in Bars sells a kit that doesn't require you to machine the hubs and has a wide range of adjustability.
This ride height setting is a bit more aggressive than what is traditionally recommended for our cars, and you will tap the bump stops over big bumps on the street. This is nowhere near bad enough to damage the suspension system though, and it will provide you with a bit of forward rake to help the car rotate through slower turns.
Springs and Antiroll Bars
The traditional recommendation for spring rates is to go with around 300 lbs-f/in for the front springs, and 15% to 20% less in the rear. In this range, I've found though that you can run band-aid some of the inherent handling of the cars by running rear springs that are just as stiff or even stiffer than the fronts. Running stiff rears makes the rear end take more of the roll force, which does three things:
- The front end rolls less, so the outside front tyre experiences less camber loss during hard cornering
- The front end rolls less, so the “falling over” sensation you get from the B14’s steep roll axis is lessened
- The outside rear takes more of the cornering force as well, so the car is more willing to turn in
I tend to use the antiroll bars to trim the car more than anything else, so I don't really run with big aftermarket bars. This is especially true up front, where I usually run either the stock 200sx front bar or no front bar at all. The rear end on the other hand is fairly forgiving of a big rear bar. A nice 20 mm bar may help the car rotate on a slow track or an autocross course.
Dampers
Shortened dampers, preferably with camber-adjustable top mounts are key. AGX’s can't really damp springs over 300lb-f/in, so again, it's Konis, Teins, or something of the similar. Surprisingly, Tein BASICs provide good bang for the buck here. Not only do they have pretty decent damping curves, they also share the same internals as the more expensive SS and FLEX (regular FLEX, not the Mono-FLEX), and are both rebuildable and revalvable.
Alignment
The first thing I recommend you do is to start doing your own alignments. Buy or build your own toe plate, camber plate, and go find a nice level surface to work on. Get yourself a good probe pyrometer as well. You'll need it to fine tune your alignment settings once you get out there.
If you're running street tyres on the track, I recommend starting with 0.2 deg toe in,2 deg negative camber, and as much caster as you can get (if you can get 4~5 degrees, you're pretty well off) up front. If you're on R compounds, try 0 deg toe-in, and closer to 2.5 deg negative camber up front.
Once you're out and running on the blacktop, use the pyrometer to fine tune your camber settings. Your tyres should show a nice even gradient, with the insides slightly hotter than the outsides by the time you get back to the paddock.
You can’t really do too much on the rear end of a B14. Just make sure your camber is within factory spec, and have the rear beam bent back for 0 deg toe-in.
These alignment settings are fairly streetable, but the negative camber will wear out the insides of your front tyres fairly quickly. I would recommend that you mark your camber plates at 1.25 deg negative camber, and set your car back to that mark when you get home from the track.
Bracing
I subscribe to the philosophy that you cannot have too stiff a chassis. At minimum, I would get both front and rear tower bars and a front lower tie bar. If you aren't planning to go wheel to go wheel to wheel with your car, filling your side rails with polyurethane foam will make a world of a difference - Just keep in mind that it isn't allowed in some race series, and that it can't be undone. A four point roll bar will also help stiffen the rear end substantially, even if it's just a bolt-in piece.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
That's the gist of it. The above setup should sort out some of the odd handling characteristics of the B14 chassis while still keeping it relatively streetable.
Questions, comments, and complaints are appreciated.