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JEP
28-03-2005, 10:29 PM
Hi
New to the Beat world, can anyone answer these qestions.
Do I have to unzip the rear window before I fold down the roof?
How much does the fuel tank hold?
What tyre pressure should the standard wheels/tyres be at?
I want to move the cd changer into the boot, if there a correct way to route the cable through the bulkhead?
I have a double crome rollover bar and am thinking of removing it, what would it be worth?
Any other owners in Lincolnshire or sourounding area?
Thanks
James

Jason
29-03-2005, 12:17 AM
Hey Jep,

Welcome to the clan...

It is preferable to unzip the rear window before folding down the roof.

The fuel tank holds 24 litres

I'm running 35psi in my tyres

Behind the passenger seat there is a gromet that you route your cable for the CD changer into the boot via the left hand rear guard.

Rollover Bar value?

Sorry I live in Australia.

Hope this helps

Jason :)

Wh1teLeopard
29-03-2005, 12:43 AM
Hello and welcome :D

I believe it's recommended to unzip the window before you fold the roof down, but mines a dodgy 'newer' one which is all crappy anyway so I don't bother.

I run my tyres on 32psi

As for the other stuff I believe the above post should answer those questions

I'm in Tamworth, just NE of Birmingham and I'm gonna admit I don't have a monkies where Lincolnshire is *hangs head in shame*

Oh and make sure you put optimax in your ickle beatie as it will sound and run much better :D Failing that just any other super unleaded... i have to use Sainsbury's as there isn't a shell garage near me :(

Anyway, are you planning on coming to any car shows this year??? If so I might see you there, or at a meet... I'll find out where lincolnshire is and find out if there are any meets or gatherings in your area and let you know if I shall be attending.

What colour is your beat??? (typical blonde question hee hee)

JGGIB
29-03-2005, 07:08 AM
Hi Jep agree with all they say about tyres and the fuel mine costs about £14 to fill up use the optomax? will run better have fun in the beat ,get the top off and enjoy the ride.can you send photo of roll bar might be intrested.
john :cool:

tinytim
29-03-2005, 05:01 PM
Hi Jep and welcome,

Officially the tyre pressures are 1.8 bar front and 2 bar rear. (4.2 bar for the spare) I have to admit though that I run mine at a bit over 30psi

On the unzip, it does say in the handbook to un-zip and a tip is to unclip at the front and knock the roof out of it's locked position to give a bit of slack on the zip.

It's difficult to give values for stuff particularly something that can be made fairly easily. You can post it on the bits for sale and see what the response is and make your mind up from that.

Have fun in your Beat

JEP
29-03-2005, 10:16 PM
Hi all
Thanks for the info, you seem a friendly lot.
I bought my beat last week off a member of this forum, needs a few jobs and a little paint on the front edge of the bonnet.
Do you get together at shows etc, we would love to see some of your cars.
Thanks again.
James:p

Wh1teLeopard
30-03-2005, 06:23 PM
Originally posted by JEP
Do you get together at shows etc, we would love to see some of your cars.
Thanks again.
James:p

I go to a lot of 'modified car' shows all over the country including 'jap meets' I'll try to remember to post up what and where...

But the big ones are Japanese Auto Extravaganza, jap show and jap fest. Don't know if the Beat Club are doing anything offically, was wondering about that myself.

adrianp
31-03-2005, 05:33 PM
Bit late I know but Welcome to the madhouse...

Car looks a good one, But I think it could do with a couple of extras (Hint Hint...) click here... (http://www.u-ukhbc.co.uk/vbb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=1197)

I got the Blue ones especially for the silver cars... ;)

If mine doesn't sell then hopefully I'll see you at one of the shows this year.

Ady.

Bruce
01-04-2005, 01:53 AM
Jason,

35psi is too high a tyre pressure, what with the manual suggesting 26 front and 29 rear. Maybe you have wider tyres and think they should be higher for that, but the car is still very light, particularly at the front.

Bruce

jurek
03-04-2005, 11:47 PM
Hi M8ee welcome to the gang !!
did you get your car off EASON? (The wheels look familiar.)
I would be interested in the role bar
is it chrome or stainless steel?
cheers

:bounce: :bounce:

JEP
04-04-2005, 09:28 AM
Hi
Sorry to say but Mrs P has declared the bars stay!
Yes we did get the car from EASON, in need of a few jobs but a good buy.
The wheels are going though, I am not one for things that just look good, in my opinion they are too wide so I am going back to the original steel ones.
Going to put these on ebay unless your interested.
James

Bruce
04-04-2005, 12:55 PM
I'd be interested in your experience of changing back to the standard narrow tyres. You should in theory get a little less kick from the steering wheel over bumps with the narrow tyres (due to a shorter kingpin offset).

Any feedback on the changes to the handling would be appreciated, as I am thinking of possibly going wider one day, though budget probably precludes this for now.

Bruce

john m
04-04-2005, 01:50 PM
I put 14" all round and just used the same size tyre (165) both front and rear. The only difference I noticed was the steering became a little heavier, the car understeers less but if you push hard its still there. The steering loads up heavily in bends when pushing on (was like that on originals too but more so now), it just wants to return to the straight ahead position, but the car seems more neutral, both ends reach their limit at the same time. I don’t think the ride has changed at all, comfort is as it always was. I didn't want to go too big or wide, it will effect bearings, handling, comfort etc. Also with 64bhp as standard (a little more with the powerflow exhaust and HKS induction kit) I dont think we have the power or torque to make use of increased grip. Its always nice to be able to induce and control a little slide, increasing the grip will kill that!!

JGGIB
04-04-2005, 09:04 PM
I have a set of orginal steel wheels have been bead blasted so nice and clean along with the honda chrome centre caps

JEP
04-04-2005, 09:12 PM
Luckily I got the original wheels with my car and they are in excellent condition. At the moment it is on 185/65/14 rear and 165/65/14 front. I feel it is very heavy when travelling slowly and the acceleration is poor and handling not what it should be. It is not always good to go big, on my rally cars we often run narrow tyres for better handling and grip and light is always better. With the small engine the move up in size seems to drastically effect the acceleration, not only is there extra weight but the increase in rolling circumference also affects the gearing.
Extra grip is a way to off set poor driving and doesn't necessarily give more speed.
James

Bruce
04-04-2005, 10:09 PM
Sounds like you've got your head screwed on straight, James.

Fun handling is more important than outright grip, and your point about big tyres' longer gearing and higher rotational inertia combining to compromise straightline acceleration is valid.

With my 155 fronts, I do get understeer in the dry, but on wet roundabouts, I find it seems to be really nicely balanced across the 4 tyres.

The tricky thing with the standard wheels is finding decent tyres that fit both ends. I went for Uniroyal Rallye 680s, which look great but are not ideal as they have a slightly high profile at the rear, and too many grooves. In hindsight, I suggest the Contintental EcoContacts. They have received good reviews.

If I had my way, I'd have crossplys, as you can run crazy slip angles with them before they give way, so they are amazingly forgiving - I miss them from my Gran's Beetle! Pretty hopeless grip though.

Bruce

JGGIB
04-04-2005, 10:39 PM
Honda must have known what they where doing when they put 13/14" on the car I have put alloys on my beat but keep to the orginal sizes and tyre sizes and its ok.

Jennifer
05-04-2005, 01:03 AM
whats is the pcd etc etc on the beat?? I may use my 4 stud 106 wheels if I can get spacers made up.

JEP
05-04-2005, 07:07 AM
Bruce
Sounds like you know your stuff with tyres.
My original wheels currently have Contintental EcoContacts on the rear and some budget Goodyear on the front. I was going to give them a try at my local test track to see how they go on a piece of tarmac I know well. I do like the range of tyres produced by Colway for competition use and before everyone shouts me down I do know they are remoulds. The road plus tyre has very good handling characteristics and last year I did an event with 1300 road miles and 48 stages with a set, no punctures and not a great amount of wear. I don't think they do a suitable size but I am sure they will produce some. Any information on other tyres used would be great as you quite rightly stated the choice is limited.
James

Wh1teLeopard
05-04-2005, 08:24 AM
Originally posted by Jennifer
whats is the pcd etc etc on the beat?? I may use my 4 stud 106 wheels if I can get spacers made up.

4x100 offset 35, original width of standard alloys 4.5" i believe

john m
05-04-2005, 10:56 AM
Good to see people like the fun factor, the beauty of the Beat is you can have great fun at relatively low speeds. If you over tyre the car that will change, the car will grip and look better on big wheels but I doubt it will give the same fun at low speeds. I think the term "Midship Amusement" describes the car perfectly! I had terrible problems trying to get a matching set of 13"/14" before I got alloys, you guys in the UK have a greater variety of cars (certainly much larger numbers of unusual cars like the Beat) and hence the better availability of unusual tyre sizes.

JEP
05-04-2005, 07:12 PM
Just got back from having the original wheels and tyres fitted, what a difference.
On the old bulky wheels it was an ok drive but nothing to write home about. Now it's a different car , faster on acceleration and so much fun in the corners.
I spend most of my time at work driving fast cars very fast, stressful but not fun.
Now driving a relatively slow car on it's limit wow fun fun fun.
James

tinytim
05-04-2005, 07:47 PM
I may use my 4 stud 106 wheels if I can get spacers made up.

This will be fine off the road but depending on the rim width of your 106 wheels you may find they protrude from your arches.

I have a set of 6" rims and need a 20mm spacer on the rear with a 25 on the front but this will obviously depend on the offset of your 106 rims

Fitting extended studs is not as easy as it could be either, you have to strip the hub for starters cos there's not enough clearence to remove the stud. Then, unless you know somewhere who can provide the right size stud you will have to drill your hubs out to fit the ford stud (M12x1.5 I think).

If you want to go ahead you can get everything you need from http://www.trackstore.co.uk/wspacers.html
amongst many others but they did OK for me.

Jennifer
05-04-2005, 09:20 PM
im not sure yet may import some rays engineering ones near the time if I can get hold of some. But the 106 wheels are there If I need them

Bruce
06-04-2005, 01:57 AM
As I noted earlier, there is a tendency for more of a kick from the steering wheel with wider front wheels, and this spacer you speak of is what is causing it. Here's why:

Have a look at the right-hand diagram I have attached. The force from the tyre can be assumed to act in the centre of the tyre's contact patch width, so, with wider tyres, you will need a spacer to stop the tyres touching the chassis. Therefore the tyre's force centre is moved further away from the point where the steering axis (the dotted line) touches the ground. So the 'scrub radius' becomes positively long. So if the tyre hits a pothole, the tyre is dragged backwards, and that extra scrub radius gives the dragging force longer leverage, so additional torque is applied to the steering wheel by the bump.

You might say that you like the feedback, that it helps you tell what is going on. Maybe it might tell you a bit, but what you are really interested in is when the tyre is about to slide as you corner hard.

Now look at the left-hand diagram. From this side view of the tyre,the sideways force from the tyre's contact patch actually tends to be concentrated near the rear of the patch. However, when the tyre has almost reached its cornering limit, this concentration point actually moves forward due to the tyre fundamentally changing its behaviour just prior to sliding. This shortens the 'phenatic trail', which one adds to the permanently fixed 'mechanical trail' to find the length of leverage the tyre's sideways force uses to exert torque on the steering wheel. This torque is always trying to centre the steering wheel, but you will notice that the steering goes light when you are about to slide, and it is this shortening of the 'pneumatic trail' that causes this.

If your steering wheel is getting knocked about all the time, it will be difficult to sense this subtle lightening of the steering wheel.

Anyway, I just thought you might want to know! :D

If you look at a Porsche's or the occasional Mitsubishi Evo I think, you will see that they have tried to get the wheel so deeply onto the hub to reduce the scrub radius, that they have sculpted the wheel spokes so that they bulge around the brake caliper with just 1 mm clearance all along the spoke's length - very swish engineering. So it pains me to see boy racers adding inches to this gap on their cars.

Bruce

JEP
06-04-2005, 02:08 PM
Very technical, I think I understand it all.
I have always thought that the car manufacturers do not choose the wheel/tyre size on a whim and that hundreds of hours have gone into designing such things.
I fail to understand the current trend of making a car look good!!! With no thought of performance.
The other day I was talking to an inexperienced driver in his saxo with tyres big enough for F1 and an exhaust you could drive your Beat into, not to mention more neon’s than Blackpool prom. He had just wrapped his car around a tree. Gone into a corner too fast and didn't know what to do. The tyres got to a point where they just let go and catapulted him through the hedge. He thought that when he got to the limit of his grip it would be just like Top Gear and he would slide sideways around the corner.
Big fat tyres do not give any feedback you just feel every bump and cat’s-eye in the road. There is nothing better to teach you how to drive than some tuition on a track where you can safely drive a car to the limit and beyond and see what happens and how to control it. It is certainly money well spent and an experience not easily forgotten.
James

JGGIB
06-04-2005, 06:02 PM
you are talking sense there jep ,as I said earlier Honda must have spent millions developing the car.

Paul w
06-04-2005, 09:08 PM
Nice!

Now, please go on to explain why wider tyres cause the wheels to 'tramline' on white lines? And while your at it, why do fat tyres cause you to hunt the crown of the road?

;)

PW

Adam
06-04-2005, 11:44 PM
In my opinion the standard setup is great. I'll say it again, great, in the dry!

Once the rain falls all the theory changes, roads become like ice rings when cornering at high speeds. I tried many tyres with the original setup and they were all great until it rained. I did't feel safe at all.

Now I have 185 on the back and 165 on the front. I am not saying that this is the best setup or that I took out a calculator to get this but at least when I take a corner I know I won't end up on a wall.

Because the car is so light any bump on the road sets it flying in the air so in my opinion the more rubber on the ground the better. To a limit of course.

Adam
06-04-2005, 11:55 PM
As for the saxo boy racer. His car handles like a boat, its front wheel drive, and his center gravity is way up there.

Those cars are way too high and not designed to corner at high speeds. So it doesent matter how much rubber he has, the car can physicly topple over.

I've driven the beat on the track and most cars could take me over on the straight but when we hit the corner they had to say bye bye.

Jennifer
07-04-2005, 01:02 AM
Sod it I will just get some Rays engineering wheels imported 15 on the rear and 14 ont he front best compromise I think

tinytim
07-04-2005, 02:41 PM
All good points individually Bruce but it's not (or shouldn't be) just a case of fitting wider wheels. The scrub angle can be maintained by varying the wheel diameter and the "assumption" that the force is acting on the centre of the wheel is only valid for static calcs. On cornering the chassis dips or rises, this action moves the point of force, hence active suspension development.

However, when the tyre has almost reached its cornering limit, this concentration point actually moves forward due to the tyre fundamentally changing its behaviour just prior to sliding
I can't say as I understand the "change in behavoir", the tyre is doing exactly as it should, providing a frictional contact with the road. As sideways forces increase so weight transfers through the chassis to provide more down force on the outside wheel, the tyre will deform giving a flat spot that has the effect you describe. As friction is lost the tyre wall re-exerts itself allowing a momentary regain of friction, this is the "warning" that is lost as boy racer drops the tyre profile (lower wall = less deformation = less chance of regaining friction).

Interesting point on varing trail I must have missed a lesson or two. I had always assumed the steering went light as a result of the loss of friction but what you say make things crystal clear.

Does anyone know what the castor angle is on the Beat?

Midship
09-04-2005, 01:51 AM
Just came across this thread.. Some interesting stuff here just thought id add my 2cent...

In my opinion.. The original 13"/14" combination is not for me, heres why....

The size difference coupled with the different tyre width and profile is clearly set up to induce understeer.

This set-up was... in my opinion anyhow, created by Honda to make this Midship car more predictable and controllable for your average daily driver.

Personally ive had enough of this understeer and am of the opinion that 14" wheels all round with the same tyre profile all round are the only way to go.

Look at the MR2, ok its got more power but theirs no silly bigger rim and massive tyre difference, that’s a fellow Midship car and I like the way it handles.

Thus I have purchased 14" rims and when I stop spending all my money on the cappuccino im off to buy a sandblaster to refurbish them. Initially trying 165/60/14 (maybe 175/60/14) on the rear and 165/60/14 on the front.

Different tyre/wheel combinations will give different results; everyone has their own preference, if you like predictable understeer the standard set up is for you.

However im perusing a more neutral beat i.e with less understeer... Suspension will have to be change at some stage when cash permits but until then all I can do is play around with tyre combinations.

tinytim
09-04-2005, 03:25 AM
I'm with you on this Midship. I'm none too sure of the original set up and will say the book tyre pressure is wrong for starters. I think it's highly unlikely Honda made a mistake but perhaps they were aiming at a different use. I'm going on a 15" rim but a lower profile so it's only 3mm bigger than the rear original but all the same size. I figure i need to drop the front end more to keep the bloomin' thing on the ground but also to keep close to the original scrub angle. It's only a little steering wheel and I'm a lazy git :D .

Bruce
14-04-2005, 09:35 PM
Very interesting to read your responses. They got me thinking. Here goes nothing:

Wide tyres are not too bad in themselves, if they are fitted to a car with enough room for them to turn within the arches (easy), a low Centre of Gravity (CoG) relative to vehicle width, and suspension which copes well with body roll. They also need to be related to the mass of the car, because the average pressure acting on the ground is car mass/total contact patch area, so it's not ideal to go crazily wide for that reason either, otherwise the microscopic peaks and troughs of the tyre and road surfaces will not mesh quite so tightly.

That being said, very wide tyres fundamentally tend to aquaplane at high speeds on standing water, even when going in a straight line, and due to the low surface pressure, just cannot dig into snow.

The good suspension I spoke of ensures that, when cornering, the outside tyres (which due to weight transfer are the ones doing most of the work) are at 90 degrees to the road, even if the car body is rolling. If this is the case, you *can* reasonably assume that the force centre is acting in the middle of the contact patch's width. I think so, anyway.

I will elaborate on the tyre's change in behaviour when you start to slide. Before this point, in gradual cornering, the contact patch, and its direction of travel, is 'twisted' relative to the axis of the wheel. This twist angle increases fairly proportionally to lateral force generated by the tyre, in an 'elastic' manner. When the limit is reached, I think the twist angle becomes less relevant, and the tyre purely relies on mechanical friction to provide lateral force, which it succeeds in doing a little, until the car is so sideways it just gives up. Sadly, I can't remember why this transition changes the length of the 'pneumatic trail'.
Tyre pressure has a lot of control of these characteristics. High pressure will mean the lateral force builds up to its peak for a lower angle of twist, giving more responsive handling, but a low pressure, large contact patch will increase the peak force capability. I guess wide tyres would – theoretically - do the latter, and tyres with shallow sidewalls will achieve the former. Although the standard Beat tyres sound like they have deep sidewalls, with profiles of 65 and 60, remember the profile is measured relative to the width, so in fact, the tyre walls aren’t as high as they sound, so are probably responsive enough already.

Going back to tyre pressure, in racing, it generally ought to be set so that the temperature is even across the patch's width - not too high in the middle (too high a pressure) and not too high at the edges (too low a pressure).

Unsprung Mass

Interesting what Adam said about the tyres jumping off the ground over bumps. ‘Road holding’ is the least understood term in motoring. Technically, it means the individual tyre's ability to stay attached to the road even if it is bumpy. The way to achieve this is to have good, low friction suspension, particularly the dampers (shock absorbers) for fluid, high fidelity wheel movement. Another way is to have low unsprung weight, particularly relative to your sprung weight. The Beat's body, engine etc is the sprung weight and is obviously pretty light, and the wheel, tyre, brakes, and half of the suspension is unsprung (though the tyre's air helps a bit as a highly underdamped spring). So putting big heavy wheels and tyres on the Beat will tend to increase the unsprung mass, so they leave the ground regularly, like Adam's wide 165 and 185s! Though I must admit, I find my 155s and 165s do this too, which has alarmed me once or twice. Maybe the Honda pepperpot alloys are a bit too heavy. Or perhaps the stock dampers have too much friction. Has anyone uprated their dampers and found this helps the road holding? Or has anyone found any lightweight wheels in the standard size?

Camber and Caster

I don't know what the caster angle is, but it seems reasonably high, as the tyres develop quite a bit of negative camber when parked with the steering on full lock. This is another reason not to mess with widening tyres - they really don't like too much camber, as they start riding on the tyre's edge, which has negligible contact patch area. My old Citroen 2CV’s steering had very steep caster, so built up loads of camber when steered – it could take advantage of this, as it had even narrower tyres - 135's I think, so a bit like motorbike tyres. Now there was a driver's car! I'm glad I survived, looking back...

That's another disaster for the boy racers. They also lower suspension, which raises the tyres. The suspension will be designed to gain negative camber when this happens, so that the outside tyres' contact patches stay flat under hard cornering conditions. (Best start reading this post again if you've forgotten about this bit!) So this means they have this negative camber all the time. On wide tyres. Then they hit the brakes, and the tyres move further up, so even more camber, then they hit a bump, hit the suspension's hard bump stops, and suddenly they have no suspension travel left, losing all grip at that end of the car. Oh dear...

Incidentally, the boy racers won't like to hear that the positive effect on cornering grip that the right amount (a little bit) of negative camber on the outside tyre tends to diminish as you get closer to the optimium tyre slip angle for peak lateral force (although the negative effects of positive camber get disproportionately worse).

That's enough ranting for now. Hope you enjoyed it.

As for the tramlining and hunting with wide tyres, I don't know, but would love to find out. The handling characteristics sound like too much toe-out at the front, but that's a different story...

In summary, I’d like your experiences of the effects on road holding of lightweight wheels of standard size, and uprated dampers. And why do wide tyres tramilne?

Bruce

tinytim
14-04-2005, 10:40 PM
Wide tyres are not too bad in themselves, if they are fitted to a

car with enough room for them to turn within the arches (easy),
Check!

a low Centre of Gravity (CoG) relative to vehicle width,
Check!

and suspension which copes well with body roll.
Check!

They also need to be related to the mass of the car, because the average pressure acting on the ground is car mass/total contact patch area,
Now on this I have to raise the question of what area has to do with friction? The answer is nothing, friction is the product of force and the coeficient of friction of the materials. So why is the contact patch area a factor?
The meshing theory is somewhat flawed and is easily countered with probability. A larger contact area gives a higher probability of a small patch of GOOD contact. (Size of patch is unimpotrant)
Aquaplaning agreed but we are talking standing water not just wet roads.

Bruce
15-04-2005, 12:20 PM
I should have qualified that 1st statement by adding that it is unlikely that there is ample space already available in a given wheel arch for significant tyre widening from standard sizes, so that is why you often need to add spacers, which leads to problem I mentioned in my previous post of extra offset giving more 'kick' in the steering. It was the mention of spacers which started me off in this thread.

I haven't seen a Beat cornering hard from the outside, so I don't know how well the McPherson struts keep the outside wheel vertical. I really must rig up my camcorder to take a close look...

The car certainly rolls a bit, due to a combination of narrow track width and perhaps a low roll centre resulting from flat lower wishbones. It is the distance between the roll centre and the car's CoGravity that produces roll.

As for the pressure and the peaks and troughs, well, I am not quite so sure about that topic than the others to be honest. Sorry about that. I think it may be true, but only if you take it to crazy extremes, like F1-sized tyres on a Beat... But I do know that coefficient of friction is a simplification - tyres in particular are more complex than that. It is *not* an absolute figure. For a start, you get an increase in the coefficient when you have a low vertical tyre load. That's why the Beat and Elise corners well, and also why the low weight transfer from a low centre of gravity allows all 4 tyres to work optimally, aiding cornering acceleration.

Bruce

ozsamurai
19-04-2005, 09:37 AM
Sorry to be extremely late in the greetings, welcome to Beat Heaven, Oz here! I really don't want to get into the arguments over tyre widths at the moment, since I defied all of them with my last set..... but I did want to make a comment for you on the original question about the back window, although it has been answered to death! The manual does state that you have to unzip the window before opening the top, HOWEVER, experience and usage dictates that in most cases it is not needed, but and there is always a but, whether you unzip or not, the inner side of the screen is going to contact with the carpet on the back parcel shelf and this tends to agrind tiny little scratches into the bottom half of the plastic which over time becomes opaque. To counter this, here in Japan, all Beat owner have a 'Beat Towel' (mine was a Union Jack' just for you guys!'. The Beat towel is the multi purpose, all weather Beat driver companion, usages include;

1) placing on said parcel shelf or in the fold of the windscreen to prevent rubbing/scratching from the soft top or carpet
2) mopping up of seats/carpet after the rain has poured in form the leak in the soft top.
3) Seat bolster protector
4) Dry surface for a passenger to sit on when their side leaks too.

Essentially, to maximize the usage of the rear screen a very soft towel is the way to go. Hope this little tidbit helps.

Cheers
Oz