It very much depends on what your intended use is going to be. If a road car is the plan then suspension needs to be compliant , chassis needs to high enough to avoid all obsticles , diff' should be high enough for quiet high speed cruising and economy , gearbox similarly matched .Engine would be better as light as possible to keep the nice carpeted beast nippy. The list is endless.Tango Man wrote:Did mine the hard way
However , if you intend tracking the car competitively then it's a whole different ball game . Almost everywhere you go on a track there are fast and slow anti camber corners and not many banked corners as you find on motorways/dual carraigeways and good A roads. So speed becomes more sensitive to dynamic chassis ability/handling. Massive power will not neccessarily get the job done , unless of course you have both power and the chassis to use it effectively.
I have found out the hard way (which I think is the best way) how to be quick , mainly down to understanding what adjustment/alteration will achieve which result . I.E. I have the same power in my Stylus as when I built it in 1999.
You might of course want a compromise , to have a road car that you can drive to the track in then circuit it or to the shop. If I were going up that route then I'd probably have a nice mildly tuned Duratec in a chassis with road charactoristics(as described above)but with a set of heavier springs and shocks to suit / double adjusters if you can afford them. C/R synchro box and either 3.89 or 4.1 diff' depending on the power you've chosen. I.E. powerfull Duratec = 3.89 will be fine , a little less power then the 4.1.
Hope Iv'e cleared a few points but of course they are only my very personal oppinions on set up based on my own experience with my Stylus.
Rob. Get building