Category: Uncategorized

  • The cause of my insane tire wear was pinpointed to be the fact that I was running THREE TIMES the recommended amount of toe-out in the front. “Toe” is the angle of the tires in relation to the direction of travel so my tires were pigeon-toed to an excessive amount. Since I also had a bit of negative camber (the inside edge of the tire is pressed down more than the outside edge), the inside edges of my tires were being eaten alive every mile I drove.

    The Focus has a pretty easy toe adjustment bolt so I’m now back in spec. I really should pick up a camber kit if I want to do this properly, but here are my alignment details as of now:

    Front Left:
    Camber: -0.8
    Caster: 2.5
    Toe: -0.03

    Front Right:
    Camber: -0.7
    Caster: 2.6
    Toe: -0.03

    Rear Left:
    Camber: -1.0
    Toe: 0.01

    Rear Right:
    Camber: -1.6
    Toe: -0.01

    With the proper equipment, I’d like to run -2.5 degrees of camber up front, -1.5 in the rear and zero toe in the rear. These values should be fine for now. I took the car out for a spin with the new tires and alignment with my road racing buddy and he was quite impressed, even though it’s a FWD car.

  • The horribly uneven wear on my tires I was talking about? See some pictures over at Facebook.

  • Very few components matter as much as tires on a performance vehicle. Acceleration, braking, handling; anything involving a force exerted on or by the car is completely at the whim of the traction provided by the tires. “Traction” is but one characteristic of the performance of a tire; others will be discussed later.

    The SVT Focus uses Continental ContiSports as the OEM tire. For an OEM tire, the Contis were an aggressive choice as numerous “performance” cars ship with sub-standard all-season tires. The best example of this would be the Bridgestone Potenza RE92s included on the Subaru Impreza WRX as the handling capability and 227 HP of the WRX completely overwhelm the tire. Considering the WRX is touted for its all-wheel drive and thus ability to drive in all sorts of conditions, shipping with an all-season is a satisfactory compromise. The Contis are purely a summer performance tire and perform abysmally at cold temperatures, let alone in the snow! I was able to crawl home when a freak hailstorm hit Redmond, but thankfully all roads between work and home were fairly level. If I had to get back to where I live in Seattle now, I highly doubt I would have been able to get up half the hills I would need to take. All summer tires act this way, so that aspect is not surprising, but the dry performance for a stock tire was quite competent. Moving from all-seasons to a summer tire is a dramatic jump so I was definitely happy moving to the Contis on my 2004 Focus in comparison to the all-seasons on my 2003 Focus.

    Roughly 12k miles into the life of my car and tires, I developed a slow leak in the passenger rear (don’t you hate leaks from the rear of a passenger?). Instead of replacing that single tire like a normal person, I used this as an opportunity to upgrade the whole set. After careful research and deliberation, I decided upon Kumho Ecsta MXs. This was a compromise of price, dry performance, wet performance and durability. The performance improvement was noticeable, but nowhere near the jump from all-seasons. Traction was improved in the dry, the tire was more predictable at the limit, though there was less feedback as it reached that limit (the Contis howled like a bitch in heat before they broke from the leash). I never did autocross the Contis but I’m assuming I wouldn’t have been that much slower than on the MXs.

    At least four months ago, I remember running over a HUGE pothole, expecting torn-off body work, a bent rim, a scraped tire and damaged suspension components. The car seemed to drive fine, so I figured there were no problems. At the last autocross of the 2006 season, I couldn’t seem to hook up, especially in the slaloms (or as Shawn calls them, shaloms!). At the first few autocrosses this season, the issue worsened and was absolutely impossible to overcome as I increased tire pressure. Instead of pulling the tires off for an inspection, I could tell just by looking at the outer edge that the MXs were toast. They survived 18k miles and probably 10 autocrosses, so durability was impressive.

    The replacement tire research was less oriented toward wet performance and durability. I wanted to maximize performance (autocross season is in full swing) and there is a good reason why I don’t care about durability (Jan2008, Subaru something something). For $140/tire, shipped, installed and balanced, I picked up a set of Falken Azenis RT-615s! So far, the performance jump is closer to the all-seasons-to-summer jump than the Contis to MX jump. I have yet to find the adhesion limit of the tires; my traction control (which I keep forgetting to disable) jumps in before the tires even start to screech.

    The reason why I was having such difficulty in the slaloms was made painfully apparent and is probably related to that huge pothole I hit. I’ll upload pictures tonight, but the inside edges of my front tires are completely bald! The outer edge is probably closer to 40% viable so I some how picked up some negative camber AND toe (not sure if it’s out or in). I have an alignment scheduled for Friday afternoon so if anything is damaged, I can hopefully pick up the parts before the autocross on Sunday. To say I have high expectations would be an understatement; if I don’t place at least in the top 10% of novices, I’ll be highly disappointed.

    Third set of tires and I just hit 30k miles on the car; that is the sign of an enthusiast.

  • New stack time!

    Before breakfast
    300mg KA-R-Alpha-lipoic acid (Bulk)
    1000mg Acetyl-L-Carintine (Jarrow)
    225mg Ashwagandha (Jarrow)
    500mg Rhodiola Rosea (Nature’s Way)
    1000mg Piracetam (Bulk Nutrition)
    50mg DHEA (Biochem)
    3 Multivitamin (Jarrow)

    Breakfast
    2000mg Vitamin C (Costco)
    5mcg Vitamin D (Costco)
    500mg Calcium (Costco)
    500mg Fish oil / 25mg GLA / 100mg CLA (Costco)
    300mg Alpha GPC (Jarrow)
    120mg Ginkgo Biloba (Jarrow)

    Before lunch
    300mg KA-R-Alpha-lipoic acid (Bulk)
    500mg Acetyl-L-Carintine (Nature’s Way)
    250mg Rhodiola Rosea (Nature’s Way)
    500mg Piracetam (Bulk Nutrition)

    Lunch
    2000mg Vitamin C (Costco)
    5mcg Vitamin D (Costco)
    500mg Calcium (Costco)
    500mg Fish oil / 25mg GLA / 100mg CLA (Costco)
    300mg Alpha GPC (Jarrow)
    800mg Garlic (Jarrow)

    Post workout
    90g Custom mix (40% whey, 35% dextrose, 25% maltodextrin) (True Protein)

  • Photo album, comments, and blogging all in one system? Befriend me on Facebook.

  • I just wanted to say hi to all of the lurkers out there.

  • “..traveling along a learning curve starts from a point where you have to think everything through step by step and ends at a point where you can perform the work in question unconsciously.”
    – Ken Schwaber

  • Random quotes for today:

    Adapt or perish, now as ever, is nature’s inexorable imperative.
    H.G. Wells

    To be pleased with one’s limits is a wretched state.
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

  • I’ve never set tire on a racetrack and I’ve never worked on a car beyond installing a horn and changing oil but by golly, I’m on a team set to join a 24 hour endurance race! Let me preface this by saying that the race isn’t a high profile event with a huge budget. Actually, the car CANNOT cost more than $500 (barring safety equipment including wheels, tires and brakes). The team estimates each person will be out roughly $750, including car costs, entrance fees, personal equipment such as a helmet and race suit, and travel expenses. Overall, this “$500” race will end up costing close to $5,000 but when it comes to racing, that’s CHEAP.

    The event is the 24 Hours of LeMons and we will be racing a Festiva that already has two years of dirt track experience under it’s timing belt. One of the teammates is a Festiva aficionado and says the car is rock solid so unless we get into a serious accident, the car should be solid for the full race. I haven’t seen the car yet, but I’m excited. We have some prep work remaining, none of us have figured out travel plans and only a couple actually know how to race. We’re going to do our best and I’ll make sure to take a few thousand pictures.

  • Based on the ExRx standards, I’m now past “intermediate” lifter status and barely on my way toward “advanced”. It’s silly to set a goal without a time frame, but I have done just that. I want my combined poundage of the big three lifts (deadlift, squat, bench press) to be over 1000 pounds. Based on my current one-rep maxes (1RM), I’ll probably hit 1000 with the following breakdown:

    • Deadlift: 400 pounds
    • Squat: 350 pounds
    • Bench press: 250 pounds

    For reference, I’m currently at:

    • Deadlift: 340 pounds
    • Squat: 300 pounds
    • Bench press: 210 pounds

    A combined total of 850 ain’t bad, especially when my total was around 550 less than six months ago.