718 Cayman GTS Hill Climber

718 Cayman GTS Hill Climber

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I Like Tea

Original Poster:

179 posts

225 months

Tuesday 30th April
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Thought I'd post about my Cayman GTS hill climber, it's the much maligned 2.5T but it's a mighty mighty thing. Here it is on the IoM TT course last weekend, well a bit of it anyway, Glen Helen - Sarahs Cottage - Cron y Voddy.



I'll post later about engine development, suspension etc, basically how I've completely ruined a perfectly good road car smile

gf15

990 posts

267 months

Tuesday 30th April
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That looks quite speedy.

Mr Tidy

22,545 posts

128 months

Tuesday 30th April
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That must have been a load of fun - thanks for posting it. thumbup

I Like Tea

Original Poster:

179 posts

225 months

Thursday 2nd May
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Thanks for the replies. Current issue I'm grappling with is suspension setup. I've converted it from PASM (Porsche active suspension thing) with stiffer Eibach springs to coil overs as it was too soft. I took a stab at spring rates picking a circuit rate as a starting point, 120 N/mm front and 140 N/mm rear. It's crazy stiff for the road but the times I'm doing on the hills are good, so was going to leave it alone until I noticed this anomaly from a photo taken at Loton Park that shows it lifting an inside rear wheel on corner exit, was not expecting that. Initial investigation involved sticking it on a jack and finding it only has about 20mm of droop eek now arranging to send it to someone who actually knows what they are doing, nothing is ever easy..... or cheap.


wc98

10,431 posts

141 months

Friday 3rd May
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Doesn't look ruined to me and still a quick fun road car going by that.

conanius

747 posts

199 months

Saturday 4th May
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What suspension is it you have fitted? looked excellent on that run

motorhole

668 posts

221 months

Saturday 4th May
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  • Amateur opinion proviso*
You might find that the amount of droop in your setup is limited by the ARB and drop links rather than anything to do with coilovers and springs. You can test whether this is the case by measuring droop, then disconnecting the ARB and measuring again. Using adjustable drop links to change the angle of the ARB might buy you 10, maybe 20 mm extra droop. Beyond that, you would need to consider a softer ARB which might have a more adverse handling effect than just accepting the limited droop.

I Like Tea

Original Poster:

179 posts

225 months

Tuesday 7th May
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conanius said:
What suspension is it you have fitted? looked excellent on that run
Nitron R3. It is well damped and until I saw the lack of rear droop I was just going to leave it as is for the season.

I Like Tea

Original Poster:

179 posts

225 months

Tuesday 7th May
quotequote all
motorhole said:
*Amateur opinion proviso*

You might find that the amount of droop in your setup is limited by the ARB and drop links rather than anything to do with coilovers and springs. You can test whether this is the case by measuring droop, then disconnecting the ARB and measuring again. Using adjustable drop links to change the angle of the ARB might buy you 10, maybe 20 mm extra droop. Beyond that, you would need to consider a softer ARB which might have a more adverse handling effect than just accepting the limited droop.
You make a very good point that I had not considered, thank you. Unfortunately the regulations don't allow adjustable drop links, so I'll need to be creative to find a solution, who needs a rear ARB anyway....

Dr G

15,226 posts

243 months

Wednesday 8th May
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Do they allow drop links that used to be adjustable but have since been attacked with a mig?

Great clip above; not a lot keeping up with that!