ira11y Posted April 24, 2005 Report Posted April 24, 2005 iroken, is the r32 LSD in your TA22?? as in its in the T series diff?? please explain :P Quote
Super Jamie Posted April 25, 2005 Report Posted April 25, 2005 no, he's a dirty silvia driver :P Quote
KE70MAN Posted April 27, 2005 Report Posted April 27, 2005 if i wanted to drift in my KE70 (i know it wil need wayyy more power and all) would i need to have a LSD? is there no possible way of getting both wheels to spin simoutanously? and if i were to weld my diff up, what does that do? like i know both wheels get more power to the ground and all, but does is affect steering that bad? also how can a coppa really tell that one has been welded up? i don't know much bout ratios and diffs and stuff but this is an interesting topic.. cheerz Carl :D Quote
demuire Posted April 27, 2005 Author Report Posted April 27, 2005 A locker (welded diff) is basically like an extremely tight LSD. In other words, an LSD means (well, is supposed to anyway) "Limited Slip Diff", and obviously with a locker, if it slips then it's broken :D Or you could call your locker an LSD too (locked solid diff :kiwi:) Quote
styler Posted April 27, 2005 Report Posted April 27, 2005 (edited) you need to read up on this stuff, like what a diff is and the differential action it performs and how it does it. then learn about lsd's, lockers, welded diffs, 1 way 2 way and 1.5 way lsds and viscous, mechanical and clutch type lsd's. www.howstuffworks.com and google lsd too :D Edited April 27, 2005 by styler Quote
Mr Revhead[RL] Posted April 27, 2005 Report Posted April 27, 2005 mechanical=clutch pack :D you must mean torsen..... Quote
mumblezzz Posted April 27, 2005 Report Posted April 27, 2005 Lockers are the cheapest and easiest way to get both of em spinning. The downside is that they are hard on your drivetrain and will flog out your suspension bushes quicker than normal. They can be a bit of a pain in a daily driven car (ie U turns and reverse parking) plus the whole illegal thing ( I had a couple of occasions where I had to miss my turn and drive straight as there was a cop nearby) A properly welded diff should give you many months if not years of trouble free driving. I find they are more predictable than an open diff and if you find them scary in the wet then you are A: A shit driver B: Not driving properly With months of driving a locked diff I never had it come out without me telling it to. If you take care in the wet and use decent tyres you shouldnt have any problems. Quote
demuire Posted April 27, 2005 Author Report Posted April 27, 2005 mumblezz: but you are a freak of nature as far as driving goes :D With my locker, I found it very predictable, but constantly sideways in the wet. Maybe I should slow down more for roundabouts :kiwi: Back to the topic. I drove with the LSD today for the first time, drift juice (rain) and all. Just around the block, maybe 5 minutes of driving. And after first impressions... I TAKE IT ALL BACK! I LOVE MY LSD :y: It's like an open diff, I can reverse, I can make U turns, I can go around roundabouts, I can turn around corners - no shuddering, no chattering, no squeeking, no sliding, it just drives around normally. Don't need to pre-empt any understeer, no need to be ready for the oversteer that always comes after. How strange. And then give it a boot full, and oh-sideways-here-i-come! :D And my my, the 4.78 diff is rather different. When my speedo says 80, I'm doing 60 (from Terratrip). Quote
mikeys toy[RL] Posted April 27, 2005 Report Posted April 27, 2005 hey i have that problem!!!!!! i'm constantly doing "85"mph (70)mph Quote
mumblezzz Posted April 28, 2005 Report Posted April 28, 2005 Yes roundabouts need to be negotiated at grandma speeds but it is possible to drive around normally in the wet with a locked diff. Also what LSD did you end up buying. TRD? Cusco? 1.5 or 2 way? My Cusco 2 way still likes to chirp around corners and makes the odd clunk here and there. Quote
demuire Posted April 28, 2005 Author Report Posted April 28, 2005 Cusco 1.5 way. I haven't driven mine on cement yet, so don't know if it will chirp there. Gearset made some mild whirring sounds on deceleration, but it seemed to go away within the first 2 or 3 minutes, maybe it's part of the "wearing in process". Dunno. Quote
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