Drifting

MK3.0dudeman

brian L.
Mar 12, 2007
1,628
0
0
North Jersey
slidebabyslide said:



This was all in about 3 weeks. i know people that have way more tires that me. It sucks when you spend so much $ on some thing you know; your going to burn up anyways.


ooo yea and the tires i forgot to say anything about these ummmmmm yea it's going to hit your pokets hard
 

foreverpsycotic

Back in the game!
Jul 16, 2006
3,171
12
38
37
ATL
If you haven't rebuilt your engine yet and the supra is your only means of transportation, I would look into getting a rebuild and MHG. Sustaining high rpms is not the motors idea of a good time, make sure that it will hold the abuse. I wish there were tracks around here that held drift days.
 

Wiisass

Supramania Contributor
Drifting a supra isn't as bad as a lot of people think. You do have to deal with the steering angle problem, which is probably a big contributing factor to you spinning. The steering runs out on these cars quick when you enter a drift. The s13/s14 spacers will work, but they're big. S-chassis use a 16mm thread inner tie rod. Supras use a 14mm diameter inner. So if you can find spacers for something like a corolla or FC or something like that, they both use 14mm inners. But that will get you a little better angle and the car gets a lot more fun. I'm going to start working on the steering stuff once I get some other things settled and should be coming out with a tie rod setup in the next couple months. I had prototypes made for my s-chassis setup and I actually ended up with too much angle and if you didn't transition right, the wheel would get stuck.

As for the diff, the stock diffs are junk. I took one apart, checked all the tolerances and conditions of the clutch plates and thrust washers and even shimmed it tighter so it would lock and it lasted about one and a half events and then it totally stopped working. So I welded an open diff and the car was awesome. At the last event I was at with the welded diff, my e-brake was broken and the way the course was setup, it was a long straight into a big sweeper. So I was clutch kicking 3rd with the open diff and the car was killing it.

Suspension is another thing you're going to want. You can do it on a stock suspension, but it's boring and not that much fun. Coilovers are the way to go. Check the group buy section for the ones that I designed and am selling. There's a video in there of my driving the car with the same setup on there and it works awesome for drifting. But even if you don't go with my setup, you need some stiffer springs. The stock springs are soft and lowering springs aren't that much stiffer. I'm running 1000lb/in fronts and 600lb/in rears and I think in some situations a little stiffer might even be better. But I'm happy with the all around performance of the setup, so I'm not going to change it just yet.

Now wheels and tires, drifting on sawblades is like drifting on stock suspension, boring and totally not fun. Those big ass sidewalls on there, just make everything feel like crap. Get some bigger, wider wheels. 17x9 and up at least. If you want to run a little bit of a stretched tire, you can run some pretty low offsets and the car will look awesome as well. I've been running 18x9.5+12 with a 235/40 and I love it and how it looks. And picking tires is also important. Federals are decent and cheap. There are also some other cheaper brands out there that will cut it for a little while. But use stickier tires, all-seasons and normal car tires suck. Get at least something high performance, the grip will actually help out a lot once you get going.

Oh and here's that video I was talking about,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zeByCoXpB3A

That was right before the rebuilt OE diff gave up. But I think I was running 225/40 or 235/40 rear tires on 18x10's and my TIP suspension and a pretty much stock engine.

Oh yeah, make sure your engine is good and you have oil in there, because 7m's like to blow more than 5cent whores.

But most important, don't be stupid and do this on the street where there are other people around. Find a way to get into events and if that doesn't happen, I guess try and be as safe as possible, just don't bitch if you get arrested or your cars get messed up.

Tim
 

MK3.0dudeman

brian L.
Mar 12, 2007
1,628
0
0
North Jersey
Wiisass I still havent gotin to meet up with you at E-town and I didn't get to meet up with your brother and see the car.Hey are you going to the supra meet Oct 27 at e-town it starts at 3p.m. I don't think theres going to be any drifting there but you should come check it out and we could bs about our cars mine won't be there but she will in about 3 months.any ways how much was tho's coilovers for your group buy.let me know
 

thechori

supra-deprived
Oct 3, 2006
567
0
0
36
houston
usually for the local events here in houston you just need a helmet, battery safely tied down, no big leaks, and a working seatbelt

thats about it
 

Wiisass

Supramania Contributor
MK3.0dudeman said:
Wiisass I still havent gotin to meet up with you at E-town and I didn't get to meet up with your brother and see the car.Hey are you going to the supra meet Oct 27 at e-town it starts at 3p.m. I don't think theres going to be any drifting there but you should come check it out and we could bs about our cars mine won't be there but she will in about 3 months.any ways how much was tho's coilovers for your group buy.let me know

Did you go to the last drift event at e-town? There's another one on Halloween, I will be there, if you come just walk up to the front and ask where I am. I probably won't make it to the meet on the 27th. I have too much other stuff going on that weekend, but if I end up with some time I might swing by. The coilovers are $1400 for the group buy.

Borhor, just go to the junkyard and grab the rear seat release thing from the top of the rear seats on an old corolla or probably any old toyota. And then just unthread the button that's in there and thread on the rear seat piece and you have a e-brake knob. Or you could just always unscrew the button, take it and the spring out and put them somewhere safe and then the e-brake won't stay up, but if you just leave it like that for the event and then put the stuff back in, it's pretty much the same thing.
 

BorHor

2JZ-GZE
Jan 10, 2006
6,181
1
38
36
San Jose, CA
I heard of the rear seat knob mod. But I don't hit the junk yards much so not really worth it. I'll get something done before my next track day though.
 

thechori

supra-deprived
Oct 3, 2006
567
0
0
36
houston
Wiisass said:
Drifting a supra isn't as bad as a lot of people think. You do have to deal with the steering angle problem, which is probably a big contributing factor to you spinning. The steering runs out on these cars quick when you enter a drift. The s13/s14 spacers will work, but they're big. S-chassis use a 16mm thread inner tie rod. Supras use a 14mm diameter inner. So if you can find spacers for something like a corolla or FC or something like that, they both use 14mm inners. But that will get you a little better angle and the car gets a lot more fun. I'm going to start working on the steering stuff once I get some other things settled and should be coming out with a tie rod setup in the next couple months. I had prototypes made for my s-chassis setup and I actually ended up with too much angle and if you didn't transition right, the wheel would get stuck.
so to increase the steering angle we need bigger tie rods? are the corolla/FC ones that you spoke of plug and play?

dude, you've gotta get like a write-up on that done and i will praise j00z.
 

Wiisass

Supramania Contributor
You don't need different tie rods. You just need little spacers. They're usually about 1/4" thick and you put them on the threads on the inner tie rod that goes into the rack. This will space out the stop on the inner tie rod out from the rack and allow the rack to travel further giving you more steering angle.

If there's a bunch of you guys that want these, I can talk to my machine shop guy on Monday and see if he can do a quick run and I'll run a group buy on them. But only if there's enough interest. It's not worth making them if it's only a couple people.

Tim
 

MK3.0dudeman

brian L.
Mar 12, 2007
1,628
0
0
North Jersey
Wiisass said:
You don't need different tie rods. You just need little spacers. They're usually about 1/4" thick and you put them on the threads on the inner tie rod that goes into the rack. This will space out the stop on the inner tie rod out from the rack and allow the rack to travel further giving you more steering angle.

If there's a bunch of you guys that want these, I can talk to my machine shop guy on Monday and see if he can do a quick run and I'll run a group buy on them. But only if there's enough interest. It's not worth making them if it's only a couple people.

Tim


I'd be in but I have to know the price