348 Handling? | FerrariChat

348 Handling?

Discussion in '348/355' started by fangio246, May 10, 2014.

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  1. fangio246

    fangio246 Rookie

    Dec 17, 2013
    3
    Hi All
    I know there are various threads about alleged 348 high speed stability and or snap oversteer but just want some thoughts from owners?

    I have just got a '93 TS (with the battery in front wing) which has Toyo Proxes T1-R tyres with good and similar tread all round. The car is low miles and feels taught when driving. To date I've only done a few runs out totalling less than 350 miles, so its early days. However, I do get the sensation that I've got a lot of weight behind me and don't feel confident in taking much speed into bends, adopting the 'brake heavily in a straight line' principle before and twisty bits. I feel otherwise the back end is going to disappear into the scenery!
    As a little background I've done track days in Catherhams and also own a Lotus Elise. I know the Elise is a totally different animal but the confidence that car gives you and its cornering speed is immense. I don't feel I could commit with the 348 to 70% or less of the speed I could corner in the Elise.
    Is this the normal 'feel' in a 348 or does it sound unusual? What are the best mods to improve the handling and feel?
     
  2. Dazzling

    Dazzling Formula 3

    Nov 18, 2010
    1,133
    Adelaide
    Full Name:
    Darren
    These cars are very sensitive to suspension adjustments and tyres. How old are your tyres?
     
  3. Mitch Alsup

    Mitch Alsup F1 Veteran

    Nov 4, 2003
    9,741
    Rear ride height is used to adjust the oversteer/understeer relationship. up means more oversteer.
    Front ride height is used to adjust high speed braking stability. Up means more HS Brake stability.
     
  4. Schatten

    Schatten F1 World Champ
    Owner

    Apr 3, 2001
    11,238
    Austin, TX
    Full Name:
    Randy
    T1R's are not that great of a performance tire IMO. They might last a while, preform better than most tires out there but overall, I prefer a softer tire. T1R's are 280 treadwear. Lower the number = stickier (usually), but it can vary from tire manufacturer and model of tire. Start with adjusting tire pressures and alignment. Those two things can go a long long way.

    Congrats on the TS!
     
  5. speedy_sam

    speedy_sam F1 Veteran

    Jul 13, 2004
    5,559
    TX
    Full Name:
    Sameer
    The rear of my 348 had a bit of a shimmy at high cornering speeds on country roads. But even so, it was quite benign - the rear would squirm a bit but then quickly take a set. So you got a warning. It wasn't never a huge oversteer moment.

    I think some of the good practices for are:
    - Take it easy till the tires warm up
    - 348s are firmly sprung and are sensitive to road surface changes, be observant
    - During the corner, breathe on the gas pedal. No sudden moves like jumping on the brakes, throttle, throw in lots of steering angle, etc.
    - If you get a shimmy, then you are close to the limits, be careful when pushing further

    The folks above already mentioned ride height, tires and alignment - you need to make sure they are correctly set. My car was set up probably for the track by the previous owner, it had a lot more camber than some of my friend's cars - it made it very stable on the track but a bit skittish on wet and undulating roads.

    The late model 348s had a 25mm wider track to help stabilize the rear. Given your's is a '93, it should be already done. Otherwise a set of spacers will definitely help.
     
  6. Schatten

    Schatten F1 World Champ
    Owner

    Apr 3, 2001
    11,238
    Austin, TX
    Full Name:
    Randy
    It's my understanding this was only on the SS's and spiders.
     
  7. AceMaster

    AceMaster Three Time F1 World Champ

    Feb 6, 2009
    34,785
    Ontario, Canada
    Full Name:
    Mike
    This is correct (on the SS models), I can't speak for the spiders
     
  8. surfwolf

    surfwolf Formula 3
    Silver Subscribed

    Oct 14, 2012
    1,698
    Bethany, OR
    Full Name:
    Michael Wolfe
    My 1995 348 spider has the 25 mm wider rear track for better stability.
     
  9. Mitch Alsup

    Mitch Alsup F1 Veteran

    Nov 4, 2003
    9,741
    Specialé and later 348s had the upper rear A-Arm chasis-pick-up-point relocated downward--which raises the rear roll axis. There used to be a jig circulating around to precisely locate new pick-up points.

    I don't remember about a change in track.
     
  10. Wade

    Wade Three Time F1 World Champ
    Owner

    Mar 31, 2006
    32,793
    East Central, FL
    Full Name:
    Wade O.
    I'd love to see the tech drawings on that.
     
  11. Dazzling

    Dazzling Formula 3

    Nov 18, 2010
    1,133
    Adelaide
    Full Name:
    Darren
    And in Europe the GTB, GTS and GTC ;)
     
  12. fangio246

    fangio246 Rookie

    Dec 17, 2013
    3
    Car in work shop at present so can't tell you how old the tyres are.

    Some chap on another forum posted:
    The suspension bushes / shocks are probably the best part of over 20 years old. Replace the heavy 348 rims with 355 wheels & new tyres, 25mm rear spacers, 15mm front spacers. New suspension / wishbone bushes throughout. New shocks all round, drop the ride height by 18mm helped mine and then get the car correctly shimmed / set up. It will still be nervous, but a whole lot better.

    Am concerned that after all these mods he still feels his 348 is 'nervous'....

    A little confused over this wider rear track. I've read that all cars over the entire production run had the same rear track width to the hubs and that any additional width was created by wheel offset, not actual suspension components? Also that '93 cars onwards had the wider track rear wheels. Any comments about this?
     
  13. bobzdar

    bobzdar F1 Veteran

    Sep 22, 2008
    6,918
    Richmond
    Full Name:
    Pete
    Start with a good alignment and inspection of the bushings and go from there.
     
  14. speedy_sam

    speedy_sam F1 Veteran

    Jul 13, 2004
    5,559
    TX
    Full Name:
    Sameer
    The 25mm was provided through an adjustment of the wheel offset. If I am not mistaken, the stock wheel has the dimensions and offset information on the inner face. Have a look at it - it should be +68mm with the old style wheels and +43mm with the newer style.

    I'll Plugz, Ernie and the more knowledgeable guys confirm that.
     
  15. Dazzling

    Dazzling Formula 3

    Nov 18, 2010
    1,133
    Adelaide
    Full Name:
    Darren
    The first thing I would do is check this. Made a world of difference to my car and quite a few others that I am aware experienced similar "nervousness" 😊
     
  16. vvassallo

    vvassallo F1 Veteran

    Aug 4, 2006
    8,329
    Palos Verdes
    Full Name:
    Vince V
    Swap out the wheels for 355 18 inchers, get spacers from Ricambi and rear lug bolts then finally some nice modern rubber. Forget messing with the suspension unless you race. Do get an alignment. Vastly improves the car. All spiders and SS cars have the wider rear wheels. I replaced mine anyway.
     
  17. Rs200tez

    Rs200tez Karting

    Oct 5, 2011
    144
    Bristol, England
    Full Name:
    James
    I have 18" Challenge Wheels, Vredestein Ultrac Sessanta boots and I cannot remember having a nervous or twitchy feeling. I don't drive it like I stole it much, but have done a hill climb and some track time with no issues or concern about pressing hard. Better for you to feel something on the limit rather than nothing until you hit a hedge!

    I think tyre pressures can make a big difference - especially on a setup sensitive car. Have a tweak around - see what pressures others are running... Check they are at recommended pressures first to get a benchmark...
     
  18. mad dog

    mad dog Formula Junior

    Jan 5, 2006
    875
    suffolk uk
    Full Name:
    andrew
    Well you can see me here with a bit of snap oversteer on a corner that tightens up towards the end, even left foot braking didnt manage to save this one.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wrH4KDKmFCE
    I dont think you ever sort this issue even with best sorted 348s but cat like reactions help. Richard Priors record breaking run at Bouley bay a few years ago shows how to handle it. check this out about 1 min in. There is a spectator shot of this as well I'll try to find.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2rgre5_rYg4
     
  19. mad dog

    mad dog Formula Junior

    Jan 5, 2006
    875
    suffolk uk
    Full Name:
    andrew
  20. Wade

    Wade Three Time F1 World Champ
    Owner

    Mar 31, 2006
    32,793
    East Central, FL
    Full Name:
    Wade O.
    That first vid... beautifully executed directional recovery btw :D
     
  21. vvassallo

    vvassallo F1 Veteran

    Aug 4, 2006
    8,329
    Palos Verdes
    Full Name:
    Vince V
    This is not what the car was criticized for. That is not snap anything. That is someone getting too hot into the corner and using the throttle to correct. These cars are pretty tightly balanced and when you lose the fine edge it can bite you. However, less air pressure and wider tires get you a wider margin for error. I push my car quite often and I have never experienced what these videos show once my wheels and tires were upgraded. I have never seen this among the differnt 348's on any of our canyon runs.

    The issue with the car has to do with high speed instability. If you have ever witnessed the oscillation of death at 120 you know what I mean. Stock front tires are too small and the non SS cars don't have the lower lip spoiler. Aero management and better wheels/rubber cure this. Keep your pressure below 35 lbs. Drop to 30-32 if you are going to cook the corners. Plugz uses 29 lbs, I think he said. This car is excellently balanced as long as you stay in the performance envelope and use your throttle appropriately.
     
  22. mad dog

    mad dog Formula Junior

    Jan 5, 2006
    875
    suffolk uk
    Full Name:
    andrew
    Cheers, most end up in the barrier opposite, including a 348 gtc.
     
  23. emailben

    emailben Karting

    Feb 10, 2012
    195
    San Jose, CA
    My 1990 348 with stock wheels and older tires was tail happy when going over 75 mph... Changed my wheels to 360 wheels, replaced my tires with Bridgestone S-04, set tire pressures to 30 psi. Now, I can confidently going well over 90 mph. Cornering is also much better.
     
  24. fangio246

    fangio246 Rookie

    Dec 17, 2013
    3
    Do you run spacers with these wheels and what size are the tyres? Do you know if these tyres are still available? Also what pressures are you running.

    Have spoken to Hills Engineering and they said all 348's across the entire production had the same suspension track width. It was only the late US spiders that went from the factory with wheels providing an additional 50mm track width due to wheel offset. Apparently no European/UK cars came from the factory with these wheels.
     
  25. Kaivball

    Kaivball Three Time F1 World Champ
    Owner

    Jan 11, 2007
    35,997
    Kalifornia
    I drive my 348 hard, ask the FOG guys and I can keep up through the turns but get lost on the straight runs due to lack of hp.

    I have the challenge wheels, the car lowered and 4 corner balanced, running 235 in the front and 295 in the rear.

    Very confidence inspiring through high g turns.

    But, but when i first got the car and it wasn't set up right it was very twitchy and understeered tremendous and just didn't feel right at the seat of the pants.

    Get it set up right and it's golden.

    Kai
     

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