Hey Jim,
Thanks for all the helpful hints. It is very much appreciated.
SId,
Yes, bring some dirty clothes. The purpose of this seminar is for all us of to learn how to make the adjustments ourselves.
I been reading up on corner balancing and now understand the math behind it.
Using Sid's numbers:
LF: 763 RF: 591
LR: 629 RR: 702
From this we get:
Front weight: 1354
Rear weight: 1331
Left weight: 1392
Right weight: 1293
Total weight: 2685
The front/rear balance is approximately 50/50. front: 1354 / 2685 = .5043 or 50.43% rear: 1331 / 2685 = .4957 or 49.57%
The left/right balance is approximately 52/48. left: 1392 / 2685 = .5184 or 51.84% right: 1293 / 2685 = .4816 or 48.16%
The left is 101 lbs heavier than the right.
Asking Sid to go on a diet and lose 101 lbs would make him too weak to drive the car and putting in 101 lbs on the right is not practical since we don't want to add weight.
Since we're not able to change the weight on the front or left or right or rear we can try to change the distribution of weight.
If the front of the car weights 1354 lbs and the left side is 51.84% of the car's weight then the front left tires share of the car's weight should be 1354 * .5184 = 701.9136 lbs. The front right should be 1354 * .4816 = 652.0864.
The left rear is 1331 * .5184 = 689.9904
The right rear is 1331 * .4816 = 641.0096
So the optimum corner weights (rounded up/down) in this example are:
LF: 702 RF: 652
LR: 690 RR: 641
Notice this correctly solves the diagonal cross weights:
LF (702) + RR (641) = 1343
RF (652) + LR (690) = 1342
To save you guys from doing the math I just wrote a program for this
http://944spec.org/cornerbalance. Just enter your four corner weights and it'll calculate the optimum corner weights.
Of course knowing the optimum target corner weights is only half the battle, I have no clue on how to actually do the adjustments. That's the purpose of this seminar to get hands on experience on making the adjustments.