Miata Turbo Forum - Boost cars, acquire cats.

Miata Turbo Forum - Boost cars, acquire cats. (https://www.miataturbo.net/)
-   DIY Turbo Discussion (https://www.miataturbo.net/diy-turbo-discussion-14/)
-   -   Chucks build thread (https://www.miataturbo.net/diy-turbo-discussion-14/chucks-build-thread-30901/)

albumleaf 02-03-2009 09:27 PM


Originally Posted by ChuckyZ (Post 362822)
Why are people so rude.

Hint: It's because you think you know what you're talking about.
(note that this has been said multiple times thus far and you still refuse to understand it, but here's some charity)

ChuckyZ 02-03-2009 09:30 PM


Originally Posted by Savington (Post 362826)
For anyone wondering, I hate Chucky because I hate everyone I've ever met who acts like him. The worst kind of human is the one who thinks they know what they are talking about when in reality they haven't the foggiest clue.

If you had been willing to listen to reason in your last thread, where we tried for 5 or 6 pages to tell you that motors aren't boost limited, I might have a different opinion of you. This thread just solidifies what I already knew: You think you know everything, and you're unwilling to listen to anyone who doesn't agree with you. That's fine on Miata.net, but it will get you endlessly ridiculed here.

I've done more track days in the last 30 days than you've done in your life, BTW.

I have agreed that I don't have the much experience. I have asked for peoples opinons. But when people say your wrong for chosing something based on budget or without giving reasons then they are just rude assholes not people I care to take advice from. If someone says something politely I listen look at my replys to this thread and the thread you talked about. Any time someone was polite and explained their answer I listened and thanked.

ChuckyZ 02-03-2009 09:32 PM


Originally Posted by albumleaf (Post 362828)
Hint: It's because you think you know what you're talking about.
(note that this has been said multiple times thus far and you still refuse to understand it, but here's some charity)

Show me where I said I knew I what I was talking about and I was wrong. In this thread.

ChuckyZ 02-03-2009 09:43 PM


Originally Posted by Savington (Post 362826)
At least do yourself a favor and don't waste the money on springs. Get a set of Koni Sports instead, and when you get more money upgrade to Ground Controls, and then revalve the Konis. You'll end up with my setup at the end of the day, which is probably one of the best sub-$2k setups out there.

Slotted rotors are shit, don't tell anyone here they are anything other than shit if you expect to maintain a modicum of respect. Solid rotors from NAPA are cheap and good.

Spend the money in pads. HPS pads are a joke, and anyone with track experience knows it. HP+ pads are only slightly better. Get a set of Carbotechs, XP10s front and XP8s rear. They are street driveable (you cut your dashboard in half, don't give me a single word about pad noise), cold bite is fine, and you will never fade them. Ever.

Thanks for your experience. Looks like the hps pads will not be good for track days. I listen to real world experience with explanation behind it. From my limited experience I thought hps would be adequate. I was wrong. So it looks like I'll need to run different pads.

When I get the funds I will be going with a coilover setup. I've been looking at a few setups and so far I like the Tein Mono Flex system. So untill then I will keep the setup I have.

Hi Im Simon 02-03-2009 10:06 PM


Originally Posted by ChuckyZ (Post 362820)
What rotors and fluid were you running? Thanks for you advice and experience.

rotora rotors, and ATE superblue brake fluid.

thinking of going either rotora bbk or wilwood bbk.

Savington 02-03-2009 10:18 PM

BBK is a great way to blow through a lot of money very quickly. Initial cost is high and rotor costs are absolutely insane. If my stock, unducted 1.8 brakes with XP12/10s stopped me lap after lap from 135mph to 50mph at CalSpeed, nothing else is required. High-temp pads, ducting if you want a warm fuzzy feel, but BBKs just aren't necessary.

robino 02-03-2009 11:41 PM

i weighed my Wilwood BBK before installing it, and it was 30% lighter than stock

i agree, most Miatas are fine with just a good pad/maybe a stainless brake hose upgrade.

230whp@15psi, 13.75@100mph
if this up here is true, i wouldn't be bragging about knowing how to drive.
either you're sleeping between shifts or your 60 foots need more work, but 230whp should give you much better ET's and trap speeds than what you're getting.

thesnowboarder 02-03-2009 11:50 PM


Originally Posted by robino (Post 362894)
i weighed my Wilwood BBK before installing it, and it was 30% lighter than stock

i agree, most Miatas are fine with just a good pad/maybe a stainless brake hose upgrade.

230whp@15psi, 13.75@100mph
if this up here is true, i wouldn't be bragging about knowing how to drive.
either you're sleeping between shifts or your 60 foots need more work, but 230whp should give you much better ET's and trap speeds than what you're getting.


Maybe he didn't want to grenade his diff.. a second time?

Savington 02-03-2009 11:51 PM

2.31 60', with a headwind, and I readily admit I cannot drive on a dragstrip. I'm talking about road courses, where my car is very quick.

jacob300zx 02-04-2009 01:17 AM

Why go all hardcore with the interior and then put some m.net autox junk for suspension on there? If this is a track car on a budget then you need some

Tokico Illumina's/Silver MSM shocks off a junk yard
ebay collars/QA1 springs from Summit
xp12/10 or xp10/8 combo
6ul's in 9" with a sticky tire
etc...did you read anything or just go out and buy?

ChuckyZ 02-04-2009 01:30 AM


Originally Posted by jacob300zx (Post 362933)
Why go all hardcore with the interior and then put some m.net autox junk for suspension on there? If this is a track car on a budget then you need some

Tokico Illumina's/Silver MSM shocks off a junk yard
ebay collars/QA1 springs from Summit
xp12/10 or xp10/8 combo
6ul's in 9" with a sticky tire
etc...did you read anything or just go out and buy?

Have you read my posts. If not then go do so and read the part about street use. And the fact that i'm buying the just stuff to get me around the track untill I can afford the nice stuff. Why spend more money on the stage 1 stuff when you know soon you will buy the stage 2 stuff.

Also I only have one track event and 2 dozen or so solo II's under my bealt. Its better to improve yourself with a car on street tires, and not rock hard suspension. That way you can learn to feel the car better. Once I improve to the point i'm using all my tire and suspension then i'll worry about dialing it in.

18psi 02-04-2009 02:37 AM

Definitely dont listen to all the people that have been tuning/racing miata's for years...

Savington 02-04-2009 02:43 AM

Chuck, the money spent on stage 1 stuff is still money you're just throwing away. I said Koni Yellows because there's a clear upgrade path to a very good end setup (Koni Race valving with GCs and 700/450 rates) with two or three $500 steps along the way to help you fit it into your budget. If you buy KYBs and RB springs, you may as well light $600 on fire.

1. Koni Sports, FCM bumpstops, stock tophats, stock springs. Fine for track use for a beginner like yourself. $600-700 depending on tax and shipping.
2. GC sleeves, 450/300 spring rates, RB tubular front sway. $650ish. Still fine for a street car, much better track car.
3. Revalve front Konis to RACE spec ($250), swap 450lb springs to rear and buy new 700lb springs for the front ($80). One of the best track setups available for under $2k.

The only money you lose is the $80 for the pair of 300lb springs.

ThePass 02-04-2009 03:10 AM

My god look Sav actually resisted the urge to tell you "your planned setup sucks" quite simply and then go on with his life, he actually just typed a whole post with VERY helpful info for you. HEED IT.

I don't want to be an echo here, but really there is a good reason so many people are on you so hard about your choices here - it's because many here have a lot of invaluable experience doing exactly what you wan to do with your car and are trying to save you a lot of money, regret and headache in the long run. If you don't want to take the advice, go track your AGX's and street pads, but there will be no pity for you later as there wasn't now when you come back saying all your shit broke/melted/epically failed at your first track day.
I've blown 2 of my 4 AGX's from using them aggressively and have faded Hawk HPS pads in an autocross - that's a sub one minute race. Oh, and slotted rotors are not for cars that actually go fast.

-Ryan

ChuckyZ 02-04-2009 12:36 PM


Originally Posted by Savington (Post 362961)
Chuck, the money spent on stage 1 stuff is still money you're just throwing away. I said Koni Yellows because there's a clear upgrade path to a very good end setup (Koni Race valving with GCs and 700/450 rates) with two or three $500 steps along the way to help you fit it into your budget. If you buy KYBs and RB springs, you may as well light $600 on fire.

1. Koni Sports, FCM bumpstops, stock tophats, stock springs. Fine for track use for a beginner like yourself. $600-700 depending on tax and shipping.
2. GC sleeves, 450/300 spring rates, RB tubular front sway. $650ish. Still fine for a street car, much better track car.
3. Revalve front Konis to RACE spec ($250), swap 450lb springs to rear and buy new 700lb springs for the front ($80). One of the best track setups available for under $2k.

The only money you lose is the $80 for the pair of 300lb springs.

Looks like that would have been a more efficient way to go. Three questions though. Are you still running stock tophats, are you running an aftermarket rear-sway bar, and koni yellow say around 450 you need to revalve have you had any problems with your rears not being revalved.

So it looks like in a few months I will have some kyb's and racing beat springs for sale. I still don't view it as a complete waste of money since I think for the next few months that springs and agx are superior on the track then just koni yellow's.

Looks like your kit cost roughly $1500. If you did it over and had the money all at once would you buy a complete coilover kit like the tein mono-flex or do it the same way again?

hustler 02-04-2009 09:55 PM


Originally Posted by Savington (Post 362700)
You talk about 1st gear with a 6s/4.10 combo like 1st with a 5-speed or 1st with the 3.636s would be even SLIGHTLY more useable. Once you're past 250whp, 1st gear is a writeoff regardless of what your gear ratio is. It's a stupid argument.

The 6-speed and 4.10s is the best track box because of the 3-4-5-6 combo, which is what you actually USE. I have never used 2nd gear on any track. 3rd becomes the new 2nd, and you get a 70mph 2nd gear which makes it EXTREMELY useable, ESPECIALLY for a high horsepower car. 4th is the new 3rd, which runs you past 80mph, and 5th and 4th are the exact same and 6th/5th are close enough to consider them equal as well.

The 3.636 ratio nullifies all of those advantages. Your 2nd gear is still totally useless, but now you have a tall 3rd which means you're lugging the car out of tight corners, and you spend more time in every gear which means slower acceleration.

Put two equal cars on a road course, one with 3.636s and one with 4.10s, and regardless of the horsepower level, the 4.10 car will go faster. Period.

Chucky, you're doing a BEGi-SSM with a GT2871R, a stripped interior... and KYBs? Fail.

ok, ok...I'll try the 4.10's on the track before I do the 3.63. Just for you.

I agree on the suspension...you're going to be really pissed when you see what you're missing, and please hold your line when the green car is coming around you.

hustler 02-04-2009 09:58 PM


Originally Posted by Savington (Post 362802)
Hawk HPS pads will fade your FIRST lap out, if you know how to drive (which I doubt).

I faded hp+ on a 94whp 1.6. lol


Originally Posted by ChuckyZ (Post 362817)
Actually if you match racing beat springs with the kyb's they are perfect match. I had them on my previous miata and ran them for 2yrs at many solo II events and was quite happy with it. Plus its a good price. FM Springs and illuminas would have been extra $250 and when I decide to get coilovers it will be wasted money.

Ever been on a roadcourse? I've driven several miatas and kyb's and RB's are moderately worthless...well, totally.

wayne_curr 02-04-2009 10:30 PM

Lol, everyone is talkin shit on my setup!

KYB shocks are bullshit even with stock spring rates, with my FM springs (not much more than stock SR) they are far beyond bullshit. This doesn't just mean they'd suck on a track, they suck period even for daily driving. The only reason they are on my car is that Urbansoot sold them to me a couple years back for pretty damn cheap.

My HPS pads are great street pads but i'd never take them on the track. They produce little to no dust, are dead quiet and were a good deal on egay :)

With track time not in my foreseeable future, I dont give that much of a shit.

y8s 02-04-2009 10:36 PM

if you want cheap suspension, go spec miata spec. $1350. and race effing proven.

Savington 02-05-2009 05:06 PM


Originally Posted by ChuckyZ (Post 363162)
Looks like that would have been a more efficient way to go. Three questions though. Are you still running stock tophats, are you running an aftermarket rear-sway bar, and koni yellow say around 450 you need to revalve have you had any problems with your rears not being revalved.

Stock tophats, because the extra travel in my suspension over stock comes from the shorter shock bodies (25mm front, 10mm rear) as well as the short bumpstops that are included with the RACE shocks. Sways are an RB 1 1/8" tubular FSB, OEM 14mm RSB from an MSM. My rears are 8041 RACEs as well, so they are valved for the rates. I have not heard any issues from guys only revalving the fronts, though, since the Sports are designed for rates up to around 450-500. RACEs are good to 1000.


Originally Posted by ChuckyZ (Post 363162)
Looks like your kit cost roughly $1500. If you did it over and had the money all at once would you buy a complete coilover kit like the tein mono-flex or do it the same way again?

A friend of mine has 9/6 Teins in his car. My 12.5/8 KONI RACE car rides better on the street. I paid $950 for the shocks, $400 for the coilover sleeves and springs (GC will do custom rates at no additional charge, FYI), $225 for the FSB with the block and brace kit, and $50 for the RSB. $1625 give or take a few bucks, total. I love my suspension, and I don't think I'd do anything differently if I were to do it again.


Originally Posted by y8s (Post 363572)
if you want cheap suspension, go spec miata spec. $1350. and race effing proven.

The SM setup is crap.


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:45 PM.


© 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands