Friday, 19 December 2014

Weight To A Car To Increase Speed

Adding weight to cars can help the car increase in speed.


Cars are a passion for many, and using specific weight calibrations can offer increased speed for the car enthusiast looking to make his cars more efficient. From moving weight to certain areas of the car to adding weight strategically throughout the vehicle, speed can increase. New technology has been developed to shift weight around the vehicle throughout a race course, in order to produce optimal results for speed engineering. Managing weight and its placement to make the car faster can mean the difference between winning and losing a race.


Instructions


1. Adjust the placement of the engine, either higher or lower depending on your desired race track or car style. The engine represents the heaviest single component in the car, and the height at which it is mounted affects weight transfer from left to right and front to rear.


2. Adjust the fuel cells and batteries around the vehicle to suit the weight requirements you need for optimal performance. Fuel cells and batteries are sizable chunks of weight that can be moved to fine-tune performance. Fuel cells can be lifted or lowered up to 4 inches. Some cars have been made to have two battery boxes so the battery can be moved from the left to the right side under certain conditions.


3. Add ballast to increase weight as the fuel is diminished and weight is lost. Moving the engine or fuel cell in place of adding ballasts can accomplish ideal performance and weight distribution, suggests CircleTrack.


4. Add ballast weight using lead to the left side of the vehicle, and low on the chassis. Many racers like to run as much left-side weight as possible to get off the corners faster and more efficiently.

Tags: around vehicle, cells batteries, from left, from left right, left right, performance Fuel, performance Fuel cells