I've been wanting to have me a little rant about this for a while now - I've become more and more frustrated with most setups I get lately. Everyone seems to use locked diffs, or if not a clutch pack with high coast locking factor and high preload. To make my point first, some physics.
Locked diffs keep both wheels at a constant speed. With weight transfer taken into account, this means that the outside wheel produces more longitudinal force than the inside one. Open diffs, at the other extreme, result in equal longitudinal forces for both wheels. The clutch pack is somewhere between these extremes depending on where you set it.
When considering clutch packs, we also have to distinguish between coast and power. Coast is while the engine speed is decreasing (ie. braking or... coasting, funnily enough). Power is while engine speed is increasing (ie. your thorttle is greater than neutral throttle). Coast locking factor has no effect while on the power and vice-versa.
Preload simply makes the diff behave as if it were locked over a certain range of torque difference between the wheels.
The other important piece of physics that one has to be familiar with is torque (not from the engine, just the rotational effect caused by a force). Torque is proportional to the magnitude of the force and the perpendicular distance to the center of rotation (in our case, the center of gravity of the car). See the attatched Torque.png.
Imagining a tractive (forward) longitudinal force from an outside wheel, you can see this results in a torque in the direction in which the car is turning (ie. more oversteer). A braking force on the other hand results in a torque in the opposite direction and thus more understeer. The opposite is true for the inside wheel.
So to recap: we've established that a stiffer differential results in more longitudinal force on the outside wheel and less on the inside. An open differential results in equal longitudinal forces on both wheels. Thus, from the points regarding torque, it is obvious that a more locked diff results in more oversteer while accelerating and more understeer while coasting/braking. If this is confusing, see Diffs.png.
So, what's wrong? Well, people tend to use huge coast locking factors (70%+ often) or high preload (so high that often you might as well be driving a locked diff) or a locked diff. With some setup tweaking, this isn't so bad out of the corner and power is controllable. Also, using anti-roll bars, which affect immediate turn-in behaviour (while load is transferring a stiffer rear roll bar or a softer front will increase relative turn-in grip at the front, due to load sensitivity of tyres), people can dial out the inherent coast understeer. However, between turn-in and apex (once the weight has tranferred to the ouside wheels and you are coasting), 90% of setups just understeer and understeer and understeer some more. There's no sensible way to dial this out.
So stop using these retarded locked diffs in the RWD cars especially. And with clutch packs, keep coast locking and preload AS LOW AS POSSIBLE. If you are running more than 30% coast locking, you are probably driving a shitty setup. As a general rule, try to aim for below 20%. And try to keep preload below 60Nm.
Locked diffs keep both wheels at a constant speed. With weight transfer taken into account, this means that the outside wheel produces more longitudinal force than the inside one. Open diffs, at the other extreme, result in equal longitudinal forces for both wheels. The clutch pack is somewhere between these extremes depending on where you set it.
When considering clutch packs, we also have to distinguish between coast and power. Coast is while the engine speed is decreasing (ie. braking or... coasting, funnily enough). Power is while engine speed is increasing (ie. your thorttle is greater than neutral throttle). Coast locking factor has no effect while on the power and vice-versa.
Preload simply makes the diff behave as if it were locked over a certain range of torque difference between the wheels.
The other important piece of physics that one has to be familiar with is torque (not from the engine, just the rotational effect caused by a force). Torque is proportional to the magnitude of the force and the perpendicular distance to the center of rotation (in our case, the center of gravity of the car). See the attatched Torque.png.
Imagining a tractive (forward) longitudinal force from an outside wheel, you can see this results in a torque in the direction in which the car is turning (ie. more oversteer). A braking force on the other hand results in a torque in the opposite direction and thus more understeer. The opposite is true for the inside wheel.
So to recap: we've established that a stiffer differential results in more longitudinal force on the outside wheel and less on the inside. An open differential results in equal longitudinal forces on both wheels. Thus, from the points regarding torque, it is obvious that a more locked diff results in more oversteer while accelerating and more understeer while coasting/braking. If this is confusing, see Diffs.png.
So, what's wrong? Well, people tend to use huge coast locking factors (70%+ often) or high preload (so high that often you might as well be driving a locked diff) or a locked diff. With some setup tweaking, this isn't so bad out of the corner and power is controllable. Also, using anti-roll bars, which affect immediate turn-in behaviour (while load is transferring a stiffer rear roll bar or a softer front will increase relative turn-in grip at the front, due to load sensitivity of tyres), people can dial out the inherent coast understeer. However, between turn-in and apex (once the weight has tranferred to the ouside wheels and you are coasting), 90% of setups just understeer and understeer and understeer some more. There's no sensible way to dial this out.
So stop using these retarded locked diffs in the RWD cars especially. And with clutch packs, keep coast locking and preload AS LOW AS POSSIBLE. If you are running more than 30% coast locking, you are probably driving a shitty setup. As a general rule, try to aim for below 20%. And try to keep preload below 60Nm.