Author Topic: How to figure proper ackerman with a 2" offset front axle and FORWARD arms  (Read 13389 times)

Offline AF/434

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 10
    • View Profile
  • Your Best Time: .897-60', 3.43/ 231-1/8th, 5.30/270-1/4
  • Your Track: Royal Purple/ Houston Raceway Park
  • Your Vehicle: 421 cu. in. Injected nitro hemi rear engine A/FD run in NHRA Lucas central region
Hello folks I'm looking for someone who can help me figuring the correct ackerman for my first car with forward facing steering arms with a 2 inch leading king pin boss. I know how to do it with the arms facing rearward just not totaly sure facing the opposite way. Any help out there from you chassis builders???

Offline rooman

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 559
    • View Profile
  • Your Best Time: 6.200/222.05 (1/4 mile--NT/F)
It works the same way no matter where the steering arms or king pins are. A straight line from the tie rod hole in the arm, through the center of the king pin should intersect with the centerline of the of the rear axle.

Roo
Yeah, I am from the south--any further south and I would have been a bloody penguin.

dreracecar

  • Guest
I do it on my CAD program

I need the wheelbase each side, the front axle width @ kingpin centerline,and length of the arms.  With that I can give you the offset for the hole the heim bolts thru

Offline rooman

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 559
    • View Profile
  • Your Best Time: 6.200/222.05 (1/4 mile--NT/F)
I do it with a string line.   As we are not turning corners at high speed that is more than close enough to get the wheels pointed right while steering around the pits. If you are steering a lot at high speed you have more problems than ackerman geometry.      ;D

Roo
Yeah, I am from the south--any further south and I would have been a bloody penguin.

Offline fuel749

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 159
    • View Profile
    • Dragster Supply
  • Your Track: New England Dragway
  • Your Vehicle: FED/Altered
It's more of a concern on street driven vehicles. You'll get some tire wear if you make a lot of tight turn offs, but your drag car will drive and handle just fine without it. Like Roo said, if you're steering the car that far at speed on the track you have bigger problems.

dreracecar

  • Guest
It has a lot to do about tire wear and scrubbing at already soft compound. Is it aboulutly nessasary--NO, but if the guy wants to and is willing to do it correctly, then he should. Again, give me the parameters, and it takes me all of 5 minutes to get the offsets, Tell me what spindles, and I can also CNC machine them them

Offline AF/434

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 10
    • View Profile
  • Your Best Time: .897-60', 3.43/ 231-1/8th, 5.30/270-1/4
  • Your Track: Royal Purple/ Houston Raceway Park
  • Your Vehicle: 421 cu. in. Injected nitro hemi rear engine A/FD run in NHRA Lucas central region
Thanks guys for the input and Rooman that is how I was going to do it untill I started over thinking it.[LOL] dreracecar the car will be 250 inch wheelbase on the long side / 248 inches on the right looking forward sitting in the cockpit. The front kingpin width is 39 inches and at present I'm using 5 inch arms with the rack and pinion steering I plan to use and will probaly have you make me a pair once I get a little farther along.

dreracecar

  • Guest
@ 5" its .390 offset,  the 2" spindle offset was only a couple thou diff-- not that critical

Offline AF/434

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 10
    • View Profile
  • Your Best Time: .897-60', 3.43/ 231-1/8th, 5.30/270-1/4
  • Your Track: Royal Purple/ Houston Raceway Park
  • Your Vehicle: 421 cu. in. Injected nitro hemi rear engine A/FD run in NHRA Lucas central region
Re: How to figure proper ackerman with a 2" offset front axle and FORWARD arms
« Reply #8 on: February 02, 2015, 08:03:54 PM »
Thank you sir, will save me some time.

Offline Scott Krieger

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 33
    • View Profile
  • Your Best Time: 8.75 ET - 152.00 MPH 1/4 mile
  • Your Track: LVMS
  • Your Vehicle: Front Engine Dragster
Make the short side, on the side of the tracks you turn off to the most.

dreracecar

  • Guest
99% of the cars built, the right side is short for engine torque, unless you race in Australia or New Zeland

Offline Totally T

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 141
    • View Profile
    • NDRL
In all honesty and i will not name names.. is there any ill effects of shortening the left side and leaving the right side long?
Troy Wilson
Nostalgia Drag Racing League

Offline fuel749

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 159
    • View Profile
    • Dragster Supply
  • Your Track: New England Dragway
  • Your Vehicle: FED/Altered
In all honesty and i will not name names.. is there any ill effects of shortening the left side and leaving the right side long?

If you were to get drive the same car on back to back runs with the offset swapped from side to side, I'm betting you'd never know if someone didn't tell you. If it was 2 feet instead of 2 inches, it might be a different story.

dreracecar

  • Guest
With 1000's of cars being/have been built with the right side short, why would you feel the need to do it different?

Offline Totally T

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 141
    • View Profile
    • NDRL
I know a car that was..and it was the first car that I saw that was built with the right side long. Car was plagued with aborted passes due to handling.
Troy Wilson
Nostalgia Drag Racing League