My take on it is this.
The flex in the chassis is enough to affect alignment..sometimes a -lot-.
Since alignment matters so very much in what we do, anything you can do to
lock the car in on the exact alignment you need, is good.
Also, in a more flexible car, the force of the chassis flexing, then
snapping around in a winding course, will slow you down a lot while you have
to work extra to keep the car under control.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: David K Yeung [SMTP:dkyeung@juno.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 1999 9:44 AM
> To:   autox@autox.team.net
> Subject:      quantitative analysis
> 
> has anyone ever seen/done a REAL analysis of benefits gained from strut
> tower braces?  they are so popular among the ricers yet I wonder if most
> cars can generate enough grip to flex the chassis so much as to see any
> real benefit from the added stiffness.  but maybe the real benefit is 
> reducing the small amounts of flexing that over time will fatigue the
> body/fender welds.
> 
> Dave Yeung
> Houston Region
 
 |