11 August 2009

Sloter Opel Corsa - the track test

Last week I wrote the first review of this blog on the recent Sloter Opel Corsa, so now I thought it would be appropriate to write my first track test on the same model... now that I had the time to test it!

I changed some parts for this test. I fitted Slot.It aluminum 15'' wheels front and rear (fronts are "short hub" type). The front tires are 17x10 mm "Z0" Slot.It (covered with cyanoacrilate glue to remove any grip) and the rear tires are some used Ninco I had from some previous series. I think they are "regular" Ninco rubber, and trimmed down to a mere 18 mm diameter. As you can see from the photo beneath, the front tires are almost the largest diameter you can fit to the car, with the wheels almost touching the arches. For the rear ones, 18 mm still leaves a good margin for larger wheels.


Now, on the power side: I've chosen the 20.000 rpm Boxer 2 motor, fearing that it would be a bit too much for the small size Corsa. A gear ratio of 9:25 with light components (aluminium crown and axle bearings, 50 mm hollow axle). More detail on the photo below:


Sloter came up with an interesting motor pod configuration. Not only for the versatility of inline and sidewinder configurations available, but also for the different screwing procedure: rear screws lock both the pod and chassis to the bodywork. The car comes with 6 screw holes: 2 for the front chassis lock, 2 for the front pod lock to the chassis, and 2 longer screws for the rear pod and chassis lock to the body. The next couple of photos give some detail on this.

The Opel Corsa screws from their respective position in the chassis: the rear ones are longer than the others.


The rear section in detail: screw holes from the bodywork fit the chassis (top) and pod (below) holes.

I had some suspicions on whether this system would work well. Loosening the screws would promote pod motion, or both pod and chassis motion? To my surprise, the system did work well, provided that the front chassis screws were tightly locked. Loosening the 4 pod screws caused only pod motion.

Taking on the track with this Corsa proved a lot of fun! The car runs very smoothly with almost no noise at all, it's a real pleasure to drive. The car has a very "light" feel (notice that the original interior was changed to a lexan rally interior from NSR). The awesome power from the Boxer 2 motor is easily controlled, with the car really leaping out of corners with an amazing acceleration, not loosing much on braking. The strong magnetic downforce, coupled with the lowered rear tires, are a welcome help, since the front does not support too well high cornering speeds - much to blame on the fact of the front tires not touching the track, when the car stands still. This is due to the great height of the guide blade, which comes off the chassis too far. This photo explains that:


Perhaps trimming the guide blade would provide some stability to the front. Anyway, the car is easy to drive at a steady pace, with laptimes improving after some running. In the end of the test, a 8.7 s laptime was achieved on the GT Team track (I promise I will present the track layout and detail soon!), but it easily ran on 8.8s with much effort. Other drivers took on the track with this car and all them seemed to enjoy this Corsa. Some margin for progress still exists: since this is a Carrera track, maybe replacing the Ninco tires for the Slot.It P1 would give more traction. Also, replacing aluminium wheels for lighter ones would give this car even more acceleration, but I've chosen this material since I'm more interested in running this car for rally events.

And we can't forget: next test, SIDEWINDER configuration!


Hope you enjoyed this post. Until next time, see you soon...

1 comment:

  1. Hello.

    I drive this "Opel" and it's very nice. We rules very well.

    Thank's Hugo

    ReplyDelete