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enlarge | Author: Carroll Smith Publisher: Motorbooks International Category: Book
List Price: $19.95 Buy New: $16.99 You Save: $2.96 (15%)
New (20) Used (15) from $14.71
Avg. Customer Rating: 14 reviews Sales Rank: 82477
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 171 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 11 x 8.5 x 0.5
ISBN: 0879380713 Dewey Decimal Number: 796 EAN: 9780879380717 ASIN: 0879380713
Publication Date: June 1978 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: will ship immediately from WA.
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| Customer Reviews:
Fantastic and important for any motorsport professional September 16, 2002 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
This book in unquestionably the bible of motorsport set-up. It is an absolute must for anyone who considers themselves a professional in this industry. .... He is one cool guy and a heck of a guru!I bought Carroll's whole set of books with skepticism, but they helped me improve my game as a driver, and I am much more able to discuss with my engineer now. My engineer gave me his old ratty copy (it was obviously very heavily used) and ordered me to get a copy of my own. I AM VERY GLAD I DID. I learned more in the preface about racing than I have in years and thousands of dollars of engineering and racing schools! The reason is that all of the pertinent information is directly provided to you - right up front. It is concisely organized to help you get the most out of yourself and your racing machine.
Every car lover should read this book February 26, 2002 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
I enjoy driving my car - in the most active sense. I enjoy being involved in the experience, and I like to know how things work in general. Although I spent a little time as a mechanic, I am certainly not an engineer, nor am I interested in racing as a participant. I do enjoy driving my cars on the track - but I compete against myself. I LOVED this book.Tune to Win was at once educational and entertaining. I expected the education, but the entertainment was a pleasant surprise. Smith writes very well, making otherwise extremely dry material absolutely fascinating. Even though this book is now quite old, it is still very relevant. The descriptions of vehicle and tire dynamics, as well as the effects of suspension design upon them, were "just right" for me. They were technical enough to satisfy me, and at the same time they were light enough that I could follow them. There is some math, but high school algebra is sufficient to follow every example. Smith's approach combines carefully explained laws of physics with pragmatic sensibility when it comes to where and how one might realistically effect a change in their car's performance For all of the guys out there adding strut braces, sway bars, after-market springs, changing ride heights, wheel offsets - all without truly understanding what all the implications are - this book should be required reading.
The Great Ones Make it Look Easy May 28, 2001 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Ever heard that phrase before? That's exactly what Mr. Smith has done with "Tune to Win". The breadth of his experience becomes obvious very quickly. Yes, it was written in the seventies, but, the last time I checked, Newton's Law of Gavitation (1687?)was still applicable. Mr. Smith has saved the 95% of racers who haven't turned pro at least five years of research and development time. Thinking of changing your car's suspension geometry? Why do you need to keep the roll center height low? Loose is fast, but how loose? Where does understeer drag affect the car the most? Considering all real professionals are continously looking for every little thing that will make their cars faster, I'm sure they read this book as soon as it became available. "Tune to Win" will show you how to find the best set-up for your car and conditions and driver. There are many suspension books on the market, but this one goes far beyond "to reduce understeer, soften the front anti-roll bar". If you haven't read it, and you want to win, you need to. My highest possible recommendation.
What audience is this book written for? November 21, 2000 22 out of 30 found this review helpful
While this book does a good job of covering theoretical information in an easy-to-understand way, much of this is either fairly obvious (or described on many internet sites), and/or not all that useful. As for more practical information, the book is aimed at the driver of purpose-built race cars built in the 70's (when the book was written) who doesn't know the basics of how her car works. In contrast to the statement on the back cover, there is no indication that anything about the book has been updated. If this applies to you and you believe the suggested suppliers are still in business, buy the book. Finally the large number of typos and factual errors (e.g. the constant confusal of inertia/momentum with energy) make me question the accuracy of the rest of the information.
Buy it only if you want to win. Losers keep being dumb. October 18, 2000 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Auto racing is a VERY complex sport. 95% of amateur racers don't have a clue about aerodynamics, vehicle dynamics, and other rather essential but very diificult areas, and the professional racers aren't much better. The beauty of this book is that Carroll Smith breaks it down and tells you EXACTLY what you need to know in a very easy to read format. I read this book and driving, as well as racing, has never been the same since. I'm constantly trying new things driving, and reflecting on what Carrol Smith theorized in his book and I can tell you as living proof that he is right on, because if he was wrong I'd probably be dead! I can't stress to you enogh the importance of this book, it is vital to winning. Mr. Smith's expertise and advice should be regarded as coming from directly from God. After reading this book the next step in understanding race car handling and dynamics is "Race Car Vehicle Dynamics" by Bill Milliken. It's a college text book and has alot of math and physics, and Carroll Smith's book does all of that, in less pages, and simpler language than that book (although that book is a really good one too, I have it as well). Last thing I will say is this:Please do NOT buy this book. I want to keep winning, and the fewer people that read this book the better for me. ;) Carroll Smith is simply the best. Period.
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