Originally Posted by
stradman
Well according to Matt Bejnarowicz who is one of the top viper chassis setup guys:
"The problem with speed sensing diffs is that they are really delayed in reacting. I kind of view them as a reactive differential while a torque sensing is more of a predictive/pro-active principle. A proper torque sensing diff reacts to the driver’s inputs and therefore is changing before the car transitions into its future state. Good drivers learn to manipulate the car through the differential. A Porsche, for instance, requires the driver be very aware of what they are doing with the gas, brake, downshifts as the car needs to be manipulated through the diff to perform at peak performance.
With the speed sensing diff – they transition smoothly, but you need to have differential wheel speed for them to do anything. Therefore, they really don’t do much of anything as the car transitions into the first part of the corner (from straight to turn-in). Only pre-load of the clutch plates is helping you here. The street Viper typically suffers from entry instability or lacks confidence here. This is mainly because the speed sensing differential is not reacting to help the car on early corner entry. On corner exit – the differential does not set until some wheel spin occurs. When I was driving the street cars – you can feel this. It is a bit of “2-step” in the rear. You transition to the power, the car moves a little in the rear then settles, and then you can roll into the gas further. This is the differential operating in the street car – it needs some differential speed to work.
Of course a speed sensing diff does do better when one wheel is in the air or has very limited traction. The best solution here is to avoid this situation in the first place as the tire cannot generate grip if it’s not touching the ground properly in the first place.
So in my experience, a proper race car needs:
1st: A ramp/plate style torque sensing differential. Good ones are ramp, friction surface, and pre-load adjustable.
2nd: If it is legal or allowed in the budget – a hybrid diff (viscous coupled with ramps) is the best. The VC helps smooth transitions and catch wheel flairs.
3rd: A solely speed sensing diff is the worst for racing and driver confidence. They are good for street cars and off roading. You won’t find any pro-level GT cars with only speed sensing diffs.”
And there you have it!
Bookmarks