Squirming under braking
Squirming under braking
Author
Discussion

BigNige

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

245 months

Sunday 12th February 2006
quotequote all
The Monaro seems pretty bad for squirming under hard braking.
First noticed it at Bedford but it also does it on the road when in hoon mode.


It's not the suspension bottoming from what I can tell...anyone know what causes it and what might help cure it?

BO55 VXR

4,373 posts

272 months

Sunday 12th February 2006
quotequote all
Firstly, I'm not an officianado when it comes to these things...

Generally speaking, the balance of a car is usually towards the front of the car, engine, gearbox etc and therefore when you brake, the car will tend to nose dive making the rear a little light and consequently loose a bit of grip resulting in the squirming,

Racing cars, on the other hand pretty much have a neutral balance at the centre of the car.

Brake bias is also a consideration as road cars will tend to have the brake distribution more to the front, increasing the problem encountered with the weight distribution.

I'm probably talking a whole load of bks but this is my 2-pennith....

mose

814 posts

246 months

Monday 13th February 2006
quotequote all
I know a lot has been said about the Monaro having bad brakes but I have to say, as hard as I have driven the car and as hard as I like to drive it, I have yet to experience the brakes failing on me in any way shape or form. The moment this ever arises, I will opt for the upgrade. I've been in more than a few situations where I have had to literally slam the anchors on, but they hvent failed me yet.

hainser

227 posts

242 months

Monday 13th February 2006
quotequote all
No brake squirming noticed for me either, it's 'pulling away squirming' that I get!
Even had to fight it coming out of a roundabout in third the other day. Not to worry though, the screen display helpfully told me there was a loss in traction!!

caspy

1,791 posts

257 months

Monday 13th February 2006
quotequote all
std VXR brakes are fine, and will stop hard when needed in isolation. Usually when pushing the roundabouts etc they start to lose effiency as the heat builds. IMHO

P47ThBolt

357 posts

251 months

Monday 13th February 2006
quotequote all
BO55VXR - I would say you are right on the money. After a day at Bedford where 'brake diving' caused me a bit of concern until you learn how to handle it i.e stomp on the power as early as possible to move balance back to the rear; I had the good fortune to drive an HSV for a few days and the difference was quite amazing in terms of handling and especially balance.

As a result I obtained 05 VXR suspension (thanks MalcN)and it has made a major difference. I have to say still not as good as the HSV, there was something about the way that car was just planted right on the road (steering and chassis set up I guess).

I will also be going for a set of lower springs very soon just to tighten things up a bit more once I have more power - which is on the cards!!

BO55 VXR

4,373 posts

272 months

Monday 13th February 2006
quotequote all
P47ThBolt said:
I will also be going for a set of lower springs very soon just to tighten things up a bit more once I have more power - which is on the cards!!


Yeah, the suspension's the next thing on my list, but not the full AP kit as I think that's over-kill for my needs, I just want a lower it, stiffen it up and adjust the camber to give a bit more positive feel, a setup like caspy's but without the full adjustability (and the cost)

I know Roger and Doug both have stuff to accomplish this but I'm happy to wait for HSV (UK) to arrive and see what they bring in before jumping in.

cptsideways

13,805 posts

273 months

Monday 13th February 2006
quotequote all
Check the rear tracking out, you have'nt clipped any curbs recently have you?

BigNige

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

245 months

Monday 13th February 2006
quotequote all
cptsideways said:
Check the rear tracking out, you have'nt clipped any curbs recently have you?


It's always done it, even Damo's VXR did it at Bedford.

308mate

13,758 posts

243 months

Monday 13th February 2006
quotequote all
You may find its related to the wheel alignment, tyre pressure, tyre tread, road camber - all these things could have an effect. When the front suspension compresses, you might find that its causing some "toe out" on the front wheels, which will tend to make it dart in different directions slightly. Wouldnt it also be increasing the negative camber on the fronts when you compress suspension? That might put alot of force onto a narrow section of the tyre.
If you have particulalry low profiles and aggressive tread, the tread will sometimes track along the bitumen oddly and the road surface will pull it in different directions. Camber will also pull it left or right. Of course suspension is the major one, more effective/possibly firmer damping on the front and rear will help it be more nuetral but it will always dive. Dont worry too much about brake bias I wouldnt have thought. With ABS and if youre hard on it, it wont make much odds. Just stamp on them hard, turn in and let bosch sort the rest. Or remove the fuse and try it again just for the excercise. Better for burnouts, bad for flat-spots on expensive rubber.

My 2c worth

PB

PB

BigNige

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

245 months

Monday 13th February 2006
quotequote all
Cheers, that lot sounds reasonable.

PCV8

156 posts

247 months

Monday 13th February 2006
quotequote all
Are the inner edges of the front tyres wearing more than the outer edges?
Mine are and my 05 CV8 squirms a little under braking.

According to Roger a tad more toe in should help rectify this.

Bignige

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

245 months

Monday 13th February 2006
quotequote all
I'll have a lookie...cheers chap