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Has anyone acually weighed the front axle weight and rear axle weight separately for their car? I'm looking for a reasonably close total weight distribution.

I know some IM have their engine pushed forward about three inches, so I don't want their weights. Looking for numbers on a standard pan-based car.

Many Thanks.

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Has anyone acually weighed the front axle weight and rear axle weight separately for their car? I'm looking for a reasonably close total weight distribution.

I know some IM have their engine pushed forward about three inches, so I don't want their weights. Looking for numbers on a standard pan-based car.

Many Thanks.

A fully loaded Beck Speedster with AC, a gas heater, Pro street transaxle, CB 2110cc and all fluids is 1677 lbs. 659 front and 1018 rear, or 39.2/60.7. The 4 corner weights break down to 321 LF, 338 RF, 503 RR, 515 LR.
The overall distribution is nearly 5% more balanced without air or a gas heater... not to mention nearly 150 lbs lighter.

Oh, and I know you asked about pan based cars, but I just felt like sharing this morning. :)
Lane, you can easily do this experiment with forward weight.
Bag some gravel, weight it on a bathroom scale, drop it in the spare tire wheel and go for a ride adding or removing gravel for the best handling. Re-weight the rocks and convert that weight to a like piece of steel.
Mount to either the spare well or affix it to the axle beam

Eureka! I hit pay dirt well kinds sorta....back in the 70's there were Pet "Rocks"
Now I'll market "Speedster Stones"... $9.99 coming soon at "Carlisle" ~Alan
I've actually thought seriously about doing that very thing. I will need to make sure I can still get the spare tire in there, though. It's amazing how much space there actually is up there with the tire out. I'm sure I could fit everything (except my lawn chair) up there, but I just wouldn't feel safe without the spare. Plus, it's pretty heavy, so it must help out the balance some.
Thanks for "all" the input guys. I can use "some" of it. I look forward to your Carlisle data - hope it don't rain this year.

Let's see now, at roughly 60%/40% distribution, the center of gravity would be approximately - where my butt is parked! And the on-road handling should be roughly the same (taking into account the weight increase) with or without a passenger. Very good Dr. Porsche!

As for adding front end weight, many years ago I raced a 62 Corvair on frozen Lake St Clair in Detroit. I put over 100 pounds of books in the front trunk. Made no discernable difference on glare ice. Out of perhaps 15 cars, a Pontiac Bonneville came in first and a Nash Metropolitan came in second - go figure????
Add weight to a sports car! Perhaps our weight distribution is not what the experts say is best, there are not too many cars with our sort of traction, With my scooby powered setup I have to be pretty brutal with the clutch to break traction. Braking, i beleive have enough weight transfer to have effective brakes. Cornering, well with the motor out back it is always going to be interesting when it breaks free, adding more weight to the front is not going to make a difference, in fact it will slow down your lap times.

Colin Chapman founder of Lotus had a design mantra of "Performance Through Light Weight.
Greg writes: "well with the motor out back it is always going to be interesting when it breaks free, adding more weight to the front is not going to make a difference"

Ain't that the truth......back in my youth..... in a real 356 when it
broke free I ended up out of control and hit a tree. Having some more weight in front certainly wasn't the issue. Driving too fast going into the turn was!
Arthur - enthusiasm should never exceed ability! But that knowledge don't come from text books does it?

As for surprising people with our speedsters, you should see the looks I get by leaving rubber on a hard launch. Easy to do with our first gear ratios. Of course, it also helps that the car actually accelerates pretty quick when doing that.

"You don't know what I got!"
Attention Dave Klipfel!!

I had the honor of having one of the heaviest Speedsters on Danny P's scales at Carlisle. Remember that mine is a CMC and probably has fiberglass 3/4" thick in some places (the dash, alone, is almost 1/2" thick in places), plus I have a full spare wheel/tire and had a bunch of other stuff in there (remember my road spares list?) along with a left-justified bit of extra weight (Oil cooler/filter, electronics, jack, registration, etc).

At the time of weighing, I had about 2/3'rds of a tank of gas, and these were taken without a driver:

Overall weight: 2002 lbs.

Left front = 397

Right front = 451

Left rear = 628

Right rear = 524

Obviously, I need to raise the right rear just a bit to even things off. That's what Summer nights are for ;>)

CMC's tend to be heavier than Becks and others, so I'll let others post their weights for you and Gerry's benefit.

Bill Drayer's car was so perfectly balanced it was spooky. His comment was "Well, sometimes even a blind squirrel finds a nut!"

Hope this helps!

Gordon
Many thanks Gordon and Lane! Your data is much appreciated!

The unequal loading left to right leads to some interesting contemplation. I guess we all knew that weight balancing can be a big factor (NASCAR and dirt track knowledge) but never really thought much about it.

Many years ago I had a pickup camper in my driveway, I used some carefully measured steel beams as levers and fulcrums with an old 300 pound bathroom scale. I measured the camper weight at all four corners. This clarified that I needed a truck that would take a 1500 pound payload in the bed. Years later, I found I was within 50 pounds of what the camper actual weighed.

Trouble is, my wife threw out the bathroom scales years ago!
I think I could get everything balanced by bringing the right rear side up maybe 1/4" - 3/8" or so, or by dropping the left rear the same amount. Unfortunately, that is counter to what I see for wheel arch heights right now, so I'll be thinking about the best approach which, right now is no approach.

Of course, if I were to move the body alone up by pulling the rear body frame rivets and pushing things around, THAT would be a whole different matter, right? Then I could move the body UP on the left rear, then drop it back down by dropping the spring rate on the left rear and the both actions should make the rear more balanced while keeping the body to ground measurements about the same.

Sounds like a lot of work when I could just be driving the damn thing...

gn
I told y'all to write them down!

I think Lane was pretty light, or maybe Barry was lightest, somewhere in the 1700 range. The heaviest was Rob's turbo SAS, at 2300 plus. My Spyder weighs in at 1450 with a half tank, and 45% front, 55% rear.

I think I weighed 8-10 cars that day. One Spyder and the rest Speedsters, CMC, Vintage, Beck, TR, and SAS among them. Don't think there was an IM in the bunch. Did Pete weigh his Envemo? I don't remember. I guess I should have recorded it all, but hey, I was busy(and sweaty, yech!)
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