Dynamo^Joe
Active VIP Member
New Dalton pDrive primary spring (100-360)
I wrote a small story on my website...
https://www.ibackshift.com/comersus/store/comersus_viewItem.asp?idProduct=137
Over the last 2 seasons with the help of Dalton we been testing different spring forces, test guys verifying their performance, I made several springs varying between the first load of 85 and the second load at 370.
I would go test the first one and switch back-n-forth sleds (same sled, same clutching, test spring in one sled) to verify the difference in what the test spring does vs the original spring. Then send the springs out to test guys for verification. Test clicker 2, 3, 4, varying weights, ramp profiles, etc but the main objective was to explore...
..."how low can we go" on engagement speed on the N/A and Turbo 850.
...and what benefits would be see from it
I pitched the idea to Dale at Dalton for the values between 90 and 370 but the target was 95-365. Dale's spring company could make the closest at 100-360 with the spring materials and how the spring fits in the pDrive it has to last tens of thousands of cycles and not fail - that was the closest "in forces" he could come to my target. It works mint for people who want lower engagement speed and to keep their final forces in the 355~370 range.
I love summer, but I can't wait to drive my sled again.
Down the road, I'll post a few vid clips of engagement speeds at 22~2300 rpms, crawling through the trees at 27~2800. he he
Joey
I wrote a small story on my website...
https://www.ibackshift.com/comersus/store/comersus_viewItem.asp?idProduct=137
Over the last 2 seasons with the help of Dalton we been testing different spring forces, test guys verifying their performance, I made several springs varying between the first load of 85 and the second load at 370.
I would go test the first one and switch back-n-forth sleds (same sled, same clutching, test spring in one sled) to verify the difference in what the test spring does vs the original spring. Then send the springs out to test guys for verification. Test clicker 2, 3, 4, varying weights, ramp profiles, etc but the main objective was to explore...
..."how low can we go" on engagement speed on the N/A and Turbo 850.
...and what benefits would be see from it
I pitched the idea to Dale at Dalton for the values between 90 and 370 but the target was 95-365. Dale's spring company could make the closest at 100-360 with the spring materials and how the spring fits in the pDrive it has to last tens of thousands of cycles and not fail - that was the closest "in forces" he could come to my target. It works mint for people who want lower engagement speed and to keep their final forces in the 355~370 range.
I love summer, but I can't wait to drive my sled again.
Down the road, I'll post a few vid clips of engagement speeds at 22~2300 rpms, crawling through the trees at 27~2800. he he
Joey