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David: Drifter Partners

18" wheels may be the recipe for Steering Angle


June 10th, 2008 -
  • Geoffrey Chandler's blog

Konig Wheels: 18x9.5 with 25mm backspace.

The magic is probably at a 18x8.5 up front, as the extra ~8mm could really help squeeze out the last bit of angle, but the price was right on these and they give me a bit more space then the 17x8" wheels that were on the car.

I need to do some research into the 18" wheels that are coming from Ford on some of the newer Mustangs, as they show up cheap on Craigslist from time to time.

In other Drift Mustang news, I am having a friend modify the steering arm on my second set of spindles and plan to turn down the inner tie-rod a bit. I think that this will get me another 10-15 degrees of angle.

  • Geoffrey Chandler's blog

.
06-19-2008, 6:51 PM
Geoffrey Chandler
Geoffrey Chandler's picture

The RX-8 comes with wheels that are 18" x 8" +50 mm, 5 x 114.3 (5 x 4.5) bolt pattern, and 67.1mm centerbore. Add in a 25mm spacer and this could be a nice way to get cheap 18" wheels from the front. Also, according to the Internet, they only weigh ~23 lbs.

The only issue looks to be wheel centerbore, which for a Mustang is 70.5mm.

rx8

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About Geoff

I have been building cars since about 1996 when I bought a 1966 Chevelle Malibu and modified it. My first exposure to drifting was back in 2004 when the shop (Hotrods to Hell) that I worked at was commissioned to build the 1969 Camaro that was campaigned in the 2005 Formula D series. In order to get a better idea of what the Camaro needed to be capable of I went to the Formula D Irwindale event and was instantly hooked.

Geoff's Picture

My approach to car building is methodical. As you watch along with our build you will notice that we only make a few changed between each episode. I do not believe in throwing a bunch of parts at a problem and hoping it will be solved.

When you are developing a chassis for the first time you need to take you time and establish what I call a "vocabulary for the car." Basically what this means is that you need to learn what impact different parts and modifications will have on the car and on each other.

My roadmap for the Mustang was first to address the inconsistency in the car. The coilovers, panhard bar, and rollcage have done wonders in that direction. Then since this is a drift car, we need to make some drift specific modification, steering angle and LSD. The next move is to fine tune the car, getting the right spring rate, finding alignment settings that work well, trying different sway bars.

If you have any questions for me or suggestions for the car, you can make a post in the forum.

-Geoff

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