yes, i was looking at that from a "no compromise" but still for the road spec, too stiff for that will always be a problem.
theres very little in the way of bushes that flex on the e30, so mostly the down side is more regular maintenance and increased noise transmission.
provided the shell and mounts can cope with the increased force transmission, as i do have some worries with stress/fatigue and making the mounting sections weaker than the bush.
some great info on the relative hardness of the duro scale here:
http://autospeed.com/cms/title_Custom-B ... ticle.html
as said the 75a poly sounds like quite a good bet, its harder than rubber but not as hard as most poly bushes.
powerflex are 80A and afaik the raw material is available in 40-95a compounds.
now 75 to 80a maynot sound like a big change but if you look at the shore a durometer chart then you can see the difference is that of a rubber tyre to a leather belt, this coupled with a lack of voids produces one stiff coupling.
maybe a solid 75a beam and diff set that mimics the originals would be the best bet, harder but still functions as the original design, just with a higher force threshold (if threshold is the right term), this would require some kind of void to allow a measure of deflection while still being harder due to the stiffer material.
perhaps running a drill through some will do the job.
perhaps np-team could try this for us so we can have some truly great polys for the road.
i dont know how practical that would be, its not a field i have delved into as deeply as engine tech.
one thing i will do is get some responses from some of our lecturers as some of them have VERY impressive resumes in vehicle dynamics.
what i am sure of though is that the function of the rear beam bushes and the diff bush require careful balance of the stiffness of the bushes as they are mechanically linked together via the diff to beam mounting.
this is a very insightful piece of text on bushes in older applications, although it dosent apply to the e30 as none of the joints are the double cone type seen here it is still illustrative of some of the issue of switching materials.
http://www.netbug.net/blogmichael/?p=103
Jhonno wrote:I think they must be using Ertalon 6 and 66 as you say from a quick scan.. I have asked in their trader thread. Some of the bushes are white some cream.
For a road car imo.. Rubber, other than perhaps trailing arm and ARB bushes where Poly would be an option, depending on your preference. No question.
For a track car.. You don't necessarily require the extra degree of movement in the rear beam offered by rubber, so I would be tempted to use some of the Ertalon offerings. Same with ARB's and trailing arms. Depends how good it's 'good sliding properties' actually are..
Front CAB bushes, well I'll be using Treehouse, which are Nylon inserts.
Diff bush however I would stick with solid rubber, or go twin mount e36 style. I think the mounting needs the properties of rubber to survive. However, you are then making it the 'weak' or flexible point in the beam mounting system, which could bring about it's own issues, increased wear, extra load on the other mounts.. Could almost consider it an all or nothing situation.
the bearing properties of nylon are actually considerably good.
some good info here:
http://www.castnylon.com/pdf/Bearing_Data_Sheet.pdf
http://www.bearingboys.co.uk/Nylon_66_Rods-29-a
of the second link a very good point is raised about nylons hydroscopic nature and swelling, this may require the bushing to be resized after a while or prevention of moisture ingress.
it also makes me wonder about the contact faces of the surround, can the hydroscopic nature increase corrosion of these parts?
the bearings with molybdenum di-sulphide in them will be very good, this mix is designed for dry lubrication and the MOS is used in the black cv joint grease to do the lubing.
(its also the moly in moly-slip and chrome-moly steel etc)
the treehouse ones are very nice, but i do think for the price you could just get some 66 with moly and make your own, hell if these guys from Lithuania are willing to do them then go for those, i consider the treehouse ones to be a bit boutique and offer no real advantage over a nylon in a normal lollypop.
(provided your not doing it for clearance issues as thats there only benefit)
yes indeed for track use the rear steer element of the beam set up/geometry is pointless as all it will do is make life harder when it comes to finding the ideals of grip, its a benefit to stability and tyre wear on the road but neither of these are of serious consideration on track, neither is the small amount of bump compliance they offer.
as for it being all or nothing i do agree, as above really, stock function and relative stiffness regardless of the overall stiffness of the individual bushes or totally solid, as i think there is more load spreading going on there than we think.
certainly mine loosened off the diff bolts and cracked the beam tabs when the diff bush was shot and the beam bushes ok.
(has an 8mm plate welded on top now, crack that you cunt)