Hey SyTy world.
I am the guy using a SyTy transfer case and front diff in a Turbo V8 AWD Merkur XR4Ti. For the last few years I have been turning the car into more of a race car. Or, at least making changes to make it better at the drag strip. I have had the car on the rode with the V8 AWD setup for over 10 years now and as I am sure most SyTy owners will understand, the thing is grip machine on the street. I know I am preaching to the choir here, but every time I give a AWD denier a ride they soon become a believer
But, I find that when I really push it at the track with aggressive but not crazy launches that I an get the rear tires to spin for a bit. I recently made some changes I thought would solve this problem and I went to the track yesterday to try them out. I put on some really sticky tires, Bridgestone RE-71R's and put in a fresh Viscous Coupling. I also put the limited slip in the front that was recently made available since I also occasionally spin 3 wheels. But yesterday I still manged to spin the rear tires.
Have others experienced this?
After this happened last fall I did a bit of research on viscous coupling and I realized they don't work quite the way I always thought they did. I believe the kind of VC used in our TC never truly locks up and can only transfer about 100 ft-lbs or less across the center diff. This is completely adequate for a stock AstroVan with 200hp, but I am pushing 600 to the wheels and now I just don't think it can keep up.
Thoughts? Has anybody ever tested a VC using a torque wrench in a lathe to see with the torque VS RPM curve looks like?
I have spoke with STE http://stecouplers.com/
.
They can make a custom coupling that that is stiffer, but I need to do some baseline testing first.
My other thought is to go with a Trailblazer SS NV120 TC. This is a Torsen style and wouldn't have any lag, but has other issues I can get into details about later.
Thanks in advance,
Tim
XR4X4Ti
I am the guy using a SyTy transfer case and front diff in a Turbo V8 AWD Merkur XR4Ti. For the last few years I have been turning the car into more of a race car. Or, at least making changes to make it better at the drag strip. I have had the car on the rode with the V8 AWD setup for over 10 years now and as I am sure most SyTy owners will understand, the thing is grip machine on the street. I know I am preaching to the choir here, but every time I give a AWD denier a ride they soon become a believer
But, I find that when I really push it at the track with aggressive but not crazy launches that I an get the rear tires to spin for a bit. I recently made some changes I thought would solve this problem and I went to the track yesterday to try them out. I put on some really sticky tires, Bridgestone RE-71R's and put in a fresh Viscous Coupling. I also put the limited slip in the front that was recently made available since I also occasionally spin 3 wheels. But yesterday I still manged to spin the rear tires.
Have others experienced this?
After this happened last fall I did a bit of research on viscous coupling and I realized they don't work quite the way I always thought they did. I believe the kind of VC used in our TC never truly locks up and can only transfer about 100 ft-lbs or less across the center diff. This is completely adequate for a stock AstroVan with 200hp, but I am pushing 600 to the wheels and now I just don't think it can keep up.
Thoughts? Has anybody ever tested a VC using a torque wrench in a lathe to see with the torque VS RPM curve looks like?
I have spoke with STE http://stecouplers.com/
.
They can make a custom coupling that that is stiffer, but I need to do some baseline testing first.
My other thought is to go with a Trailblazer SS NV120 TC. This is a Torsen style and wouldn't have any lag, but has other issues I can get into details about later.
Thanks in advance,
Tim
XR4X4Ti