In fairness to this discussion the Toyota Van I drove had 175,000 miles on it
with the original shocks and crappy tires. I think it was a 1989 with the
narrower track and higher center of gravity. The Previa is a later model
Toyota van with a wider track and wheelbase.
Sorry, my mistake - the Previa does look like a turtle, though : )
-Derek
Maybe we should institute a policy that the Safety Steward test drives the
proposed vehicle at speed and if it rolls they simply hand back the keys to the
owner and say "this vehicle is not acceptable for Solo II" : )
Bill Hamburgen 650-617-3329 FAX -3374 wrote:
> I'd been holding off weighing in on this, but I can't any longer.
> Derek Butts said:
>
> > I have driven this van before. We used to have one as a parts van.
> > If autocrossed it will end up like an upside down turtle....
>
> I have both autocrossed my Previa and been up on two wheels in my GTI.
>
> My Previa is an Altrak, with a rear sway bar, good shocks, and slightly
> lower than stock due to low profile tires (215/60-15). It handles better
> than a lot of sedans. I autocrossed it once at an SFR event (at Alameda
> NAS about 4 years ago) and my time put me in the top 80% of the entire
> field. Beat a Porsche, a Vette, and a Tiger among others. Look it up.
>
> My GTI was running in ES on BFG R1s at another SFR event. My co-driver
> sawed the wheel trying to catch a spin and got us up on two wheels.
> I couldn't tell, but Katie Elder and other reliable witnesses said they
> saw air under the tires. I did not like this. I lowered the car 1.25",
> beefed up sway bars and moved to DSP. The car is now totally
> uncompetitive, but is safer and a lot more fun to drive.
>
> What's the point? That vehicle/tire combos that roll with some regularity,
> such as race rubber clad but otherwise stock VWs, BMWs, and various
> econoboxes, are allowed to run events, but others that *may* be even less
> prone to rollover provoke a knee jerk reaction like, "A Previa is not an
> acceptable vehicle for Solo II"
>
> My suggestion: you can't easily measure CG during tech, but you can
> measure outside dimensions. CG height can be conservatively approximated
> as the midpoint between ground clearance (C) and height (H). Divide the
> estimated CG height by the track width (T) and use that ratio as a
> stability index.
> C + H
> ----- = stability index
> T
>
> Pick a cutoff stability index that would exclude vehicles already known
> to have a propensity to turn turtle (VWs, 3 series BMWs, etc).
> And encourage vehicles over that ratio be excluded by the safety steward
> on stability grounds, unless the vehicle is classed in the rulebook.
> Perhaps my Previa could have been excluded on under this rule. So be it.
>
> Note that lowering a vehicle reduces both C and H. This correlates well
> with what we all know intuitively.
>
> I'm not claiming this formula is perfect, but I think it's better than
> excluding vehicles based on appearance.
>
> /Bill
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