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Weight Management for Speed

Place It Right for Bite
By Scott Bloomquist
Photography by Tom Hintz
S Bloomquist Dirt Late Model Race Car Front Drivers Side View Countersteer
Scott Bloomquist is getting... 
   
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S Bloomquist Dirt Late Model Race Car Front Drivers Side View Countersteer
Scott Bloomquist is getting closer to his third straight Hav-A-Tampa Dirt Racing Series championship, and has won nearly $200,000 in &821796. Scott shares his knowledge of weight management to help you win.
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Generally speaking, when required... 
   
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Generally speaking, when required by rules to run front weight near the engine, mount it as high as possible, unless racing at a high-traction track.
Late Model Dirt Racers Rear Right Side View
Late Model racers are notoriously... 
   
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Late Model Dirt Racers Rear Right Side View
Late Model racers are notoriously picky about fellow racers getting a peak of their rear suspension and weight placement.
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See text with following c... 
   
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See text with following caption.
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There are various weight placement... 
   
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There are various weight placement and mounting methods. Follow your track rules about weight mounting and protect you and your fellow racers from stray weights on the track.
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Diagrams 1, 2 and 3.
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Diagram 4

Weight & Speed

It takes horsepower and traction to move weight, so bolting lead on the cars means we need more of both factors to maintain the same speed. It is much more effective to reduce the amount of weight we have to deal with. Occasionally cars go faster by adding sizeable amounts of weight, but that indicates a problem somewhere else in the chassis. Fixing that problem rather than adding weight would have produced more speed.

Driver Placement

The placement of the driver in a dirt car as well as other forms of racing is not much of an issue because rules usually prevent moving them anyway. We have to look at driver placement as a constant and concentrate on his or her actual weight and how that impacts weight percentages and transfer. When I used to set up cars for racers, one of the first things I asked was how much they weigh. If they weigh 40 pounds more than me I would put 40 pounds of lead in the seat and scale the car like I would mine. Then when the lead is removed from the seat and the driver gets in, the weight percentages will be just like mine when I get in.

Left-Side Weight

Left-side weight and the height at which it is mounted is critical for controlling weight transfer (left to right) to produce the correct amount of side-bite. Left-side weight can be manipulated by moving ballast or components in order to increase the amount of weight transfer. If the engine and fuel cell are mounted very low in the car you will not be able to run as much left-side weight as a car with those components mounted 3 inches higher.

Weight and Height

Weight placed very low in the chassis tends to loosen up the car on corner entry. Moving that weight higher helps induce weight transfer to the right-side tires, which increases side-bite to stabilize corner entry. Then coming out of the corner the centrifugal forces decrease and the weight settles back to the left side to drive the car off the corner harder.

Front to Rear Weights

Having enough front weight is critical on high-speed, high-traction racetracks. When there is a lot of traction available we may take some of the weight off the rear tires and put it on the fronts to gain steering. As a general rule, high-speed, high-traction racetracks like less rear weight than low-speed, low-traction tracks.

Track Conditions & Weight

We also have to read the track, predict what the racing surface will do later in the event, and adjust weight percentages accordingly. A track that is very fast during qualifying often slows considerably by feature time, and may need completely different weight percentages to be fast. Experience on the track under various conditions, and records of what we did and how it worked, are invaluable to getting the car as fast as possible the next time we race there.


Toyota Tacoma Research
Toyota Tacoma When shopping for a new car take a look at the Toyota Tacoma. The 2010 Tacoma goes for a suggested retail price of $20,105.00. It has had 3 vehicle recalls, which can give you an idea about its reliability. You may also be interested in the Mitsubishi Eclipse and the Dodge Viper.
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