So i've been autocrossing for a long time, but this is my first time with a vehicle which doesn't have an independent rear suspension.
It seems that to make the handling on the FiST more responsive, Ford's engineers used a smaller front sway bar and stiffened the rear torsion beam.
Now, with my "aggressive" driving style, the car gets a little understeery, and on my old FWD cars, I solved that with rear sway bars (and eventually stiffer rear coilover springs) and inducing a little lift-off oversteer.
In the case for a torsion beam, I don't see where the benefits lie in connecting a sway bar strut to strut. Maybe by reducing the overall moment arm? But every sway bar on the market is bent towards the torsion beam so it does't seem like a huge improvement...
It seems like it would be more beneficial to stiffen the torsion beam itself without boxing it, something to the effect of Pierce Motorsports torsion bar?
Or maybe the rear sway bars exist to even out the fatter front sway bars on the market?
What am I missing?
Help me FiSTy forum, you're my only hope.
It seems that to make the handling on the FiST more responsive, Ford's engineers used a smaller front sway bar and stiffened the rear torsion beam.
Now, with my "aggressive" driving style, the car gets a little understeery, and on my old FWD cars, I solved that with rear sway bars (and eventually stiffer rear coilover springs) and inducing a little lift-off oversteer.
In the case for a torsion beam, I don't see where the benefits lie in connecting a sway bar strut to strut. Maybe by reducing the overall moment arm? But every sway bar on the market is bent towards the torsion beam so it does't seem like a huge improvement...
It seems like it would be more beneficial to stiffen the torsion beam itself without boxing it, something to the effect of Pierce Motorsports torsion bar?
Or maybe the rear sway bars exist to even out the fatter front sway bars on the market?
What am I missing?
Help me FiSTy forum, you're my only hope.