Good grief this thread has been busy!
It's pretty ballesy to say Tim redesigned the HDK suspension. I know Tim asked Denny if he could lower the point for the LCAs to get the front down.
You can actually see in the first picture with the original HDK K-Member that Tim's car sits higher than my torsion bar car. I wasn't aware that Tim provided the design for it. It was an ask that Denny reworked and delivered. See, that's what R&D is about design and test. If a test pilot says the plane does roll fast enough, it may be an issue with the ailerons. The pilot doesn't all of a sudden become the designer, he's testing and verifying. That's what Tim was doing with Denny, and in a very short amount of time Time jumped from 4th, 5th place at MoParty Grand Champion to winner. And his tires are still too small!
The only problem I have with Denny is that he didn't pick me! But I wasn't ready two ago and didn't have the driver experience Tim did in autocross, and I still don't. Congrats to Tim's HDK equipped HemiDuster for winning at MoParty 2025, outstanding job guys! Pictures from SCCA CAM Challenge earlier this year in STL.
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I wholeheartedly agree. What Tim did with his HDK was optimization, not redesigning. Some of the changes to the LCA mount and position may strike someone with a torsion bar set up as design, but, the HDK allows for easier movement there. It may be one of the only things that really differs in adjustability from the torsion bar set up. Of course, the fact that all of the HDK's are now that way because of a supplier change I mean, that's just luck then yeah? If the tie rod end change had a negative effect on roll center, then what?
And honestly, I think you're getting very close with your torsion bar set up. I know you're at the limit for lowering with your current set up, but I think that a set of QA1 tubular LCA's and slightly larger torsion bars would put you in a better spot than you are now. At some point the header flanges and inner fenders are limiting, that's pretty close to where I'm at. And that would be the same regardless of the type of suspension, that's just wheel height and available suspension travel.
pretty aggressive.....guys that buy these hot rods do not care much about tire wear which is what you get with that amount of caster / camber.
This is not accurate. The reason behind that is changes in tire construction and design. You can run -1°+ of camber and 6.5°+ of caster and see absolutely zero tire wear issues because of those settings. I know because I do. I've run as much at -1.5° camber in the past, although that was about where I started to see camber wear. I'm at -1.2° now, and quite frankly now that my drive includes more mountain roads than freeways I'd be willing to bet I could probably get closer to -1.5° without seeing camber wear just because I spend more time with lateral loading than I used to.
I've also run as much as +8° of caster, I dialed that back because of the increased steering effort, but I probably ran that much for at least a year. Been a bit. Anyway, the two sets of tires I've been through in about 40k miles both ended up getting replaced because of rear tire wear anyway. I could give up some camber wear on the front and still have to change them out before the fronts were out of spec.
So let me get this straight. HDK has zero advantages over torsionbars, the geometry is terrible, Tim Talbot, completely redesigned the kit because Denny didn't know what he was doing. Even with that, there is no advantage to this system even thought Tim street drives it 50 miles to and from his local autocross venue, races, comes home and then wins Grand Champion Vintage beating a Speedtech equipped car with 315s square, runs 12.29 @ 115MPH in the 1/4. But it's all juke, got it. I could watch CNN for this crap, but I don't
C'mon man.
The HDK (and other systems) get you a rack and pinion, header clearance, save some weight. We all know those are advantages. I mean the rack thing is really just feel, but if Denny's customers are willing to pay for it and they like it, well, here we are.
The out of the box geometry, or at least what has been shown, is not as good as a nearly stock torsion bar set up. Granted, we haven't even seen all of the geometry numbers still. It's not terrible, but, it's not better either. Tim used 2" extended ball joints to get to the point where the geometry he's shared was slightly better than a stock torsion bar suspension lowered only 1". And that's with the raised LCA pivot too. The static suspension alignment numbers are pretty much entirely down to the SPC UCA's, I've got similar static numbers.
Regardless, the geometry differences are still pretty minor. And as Tim showed, you can do a lot to tune suspension. But, that goes for torsion bars too, you can use extended ball joints, the same SPC UCA's as Tim, and play with the ride height to make the geometry what you want. Some of the geometry changes are arguable too as far as better/worse, some of that comes down to driver preference and car set up too. Look at Bill Reilly's article that has all the suspension data in it with the 73+ and FMJ spindles. The FMJ spindle swap slightly increases bump steer, which everyone knows is bad right?But it also improves camber gain. The argument being that with wide front tires camber gain is more important than a slight change increase in bump steer (which remains within tolerable levels). Is it? I mean I run FMJ spindles and 275's and I don't have any perceptible bump steer issues, but maybe you just run more static camber and call it a day. Head to head you'd need professional drivers to even begin to cut margins fine enough to know that, and hell, it would be track dependent. A bumpy vs smooth track might change the results on that.
And that's what it really comes down to,
all suspension design involves a trade off. Better at one thing usually means worse at another.