Cross Weight Calculator
Calculate diagonal weight distribution and wedge for optimal handling balance
Include safety gear and helmet
6 lbs per gallon. Full tank affects balance significantly
50% = balanced, 52-54% = preload for left turns
What Is Cross Weight?
Cross weight is the percentage of total vehicle weight carried on one diagonal of the car.
It is calculated using:
- Left Front (LF)
- Right Front (RF)
- Left Rear (LR)
- Right Rear (RR)
The key diagonal is:
Left Front + Right Rear
Then divide that by total vehicle weight.
Cross Weight Formula
Cross Weight % = (LF + RR) ÷ Total Weight × 100
If the result is:
- 50% → Perfectly balanced diagonally
- Above 50% → More weight on LF/RR diagonal (adds wedge)
- Below 50% → More weight on RF/LR diagonal
Many racers call cross weight wedge.
Why Cross Weight Matters
Cross weight affects:
- Corner entry balance
- Corner exit traction
- Left vs right turn handling
- Launch stability (drag racing)
- Steering feel
A small 1–2% change can completely change how the car behaves.
For example:
- Too much cross weight → car may feel tight
- Too little cross weight → car may feel loose
Balance is everything.
How the Cross Weight Calculator Works
The calculator uses these inputs:
- Left Front Scale (lbs)
- Right Front Scale (lbs)
- Left Rear Scale (lbs)
- Right Rear Scale (lbs)
- Driver weight (with helmet and gear)
- Fuel load (6 lbs per gallon)
- Vehicle type
- Target cross weight percentage
It then calculates:
- Total vehicle weight
- Left side percentage
- Front / rear percentage
- Cross weight percentage
- Wedge (Cross − 50%)
- Bite (LR − RR)
- Adjustment recommendations
This gives you both numbers and setup guidance.
Step-By-Step: How to Use a Cross Weight Calculator
1. Put the Car on Scales
Use four corner scales on a level surface.
Make sure:
- Tire pressures are set
- Driver is in the seat (or equal ballast added)
- Fuel level matches race condition
- Suspension is settled
2. Enter the Four Corner Weights
Input:
- LF
- RF
- LR
- RR
All four must be entered to calculate correctly.
3. Add Driver and Fuel
Fuel matters more than most people think.
12 gallons adds 72 lbs. That changes balance.
Always scale the car in race trim.
4. Choose Vehicle Type
The calculator adjusts recommendations depending on:
- Circle track
- Drag racing
- Road course
- Street/strip
- Dirt oval
Each style needs a different cross weight target.
5. Set Target Cross Weight
Common targets:
| Application | Target Cross Weight |
|---|---|
| Road course | 49.5–50.5% |
| Drag racing | 50–51% |
| Asphalt circle track | 52–56% |
| Dirt oval | 52–58% |
| Street/strip | 50–52% |
The calculator compares your current setup to your target and shows how far off you are.
Understanding the Results
Cross Weight Percentage
This is your diagonal balance number.
Example:
If total weight = 3,200 lbs
LF + RR = 1,664 lbs
Cross Weight =
1,664 ÷ 3,200 × 100 = 52%
That means you have 2% wedge.
Wedge (Cross − 50%)
- 0% → Neutral
- Positive number → Adds tightness
- Negative number → Adds looseness
Small changes matter. Even 0.5% can be noticeable.
Bite (Left Rear − Right Rear)
Bite is important for:
- Dirt racing
- Drag racing
- Low grip conditions
More left rear weight usually improves forward traction.
How to Adjust Cross Weight
The calculator suggests three types of changes:
1. Spring or Coil Adjustments
To increase cross weight:
- Raise LF and RR
or - Lower RF and LR
To decrease cross weight:
- Lower LF and RR
or - Raise RF and LR
Small changes go a long way.
2. Sway Bar Changes
- Stiffen rear bar → increases rotation
- Stiffen front bar → increases tightness
The calculator estimates approximate stiffness changes in lbs/in.
3. Moving Ballast
Sometimes the easiest solution is weight placement.
If cross weight is low:
Move weight from RF/LR diagonal to LF/RR diagonal.
Even 20–30 lbs can make a big difference.
Application-Specific Guidance
Circle Track (Asphalt)
- Typical: 52–56%
- Higher cross → tighter entry
- Lower cross → freer rotation
Left-turn cars need preload for consistent cornering.
Dirt Oval
- 52–58% common
- Higher cross helps on slick tracks
- Bite (LR weight) is critical
Track condition changes everything.
Drag Racing
- 50–51% ideal
- Too much wedge can cause drift
- More bite helps launch on marginal surfaces
Launch straight and repeatable is the goal.
Road Course / Autocross
- 49.5–50.5%
- Neutral balance for left and right turns
- Adjust slightly for track direction dominance
Balance beats bias here.
Street / Strip
- 50–52% works well
- Slight wedge improves stability
- Comfort and predictability matter more than ultimate edge grip
Common Cross Weight Mistakes
- Scaling without driver weight
- Ignoring fuel load
- Making large adjustments
- Not re-settling suspension before re-scaling
- Chasing cross weight without checking tire temps
Numbers guide you, but driver feel confirms it.
Example Calculation
Let’s say:
- LF: 850 lbs
- RF: 825 lbs
- LR: 780 lbs
- RR: 795 lbs
- Driver: 180 lbs
- Fuel: 12 gallons
Fuel weight = 12 × 6 = 72 lbs
Total weight = 850 + 825 + 780 + 795 + 180 + 72
Total = 3,502 lbs
Cross diagonal (LF + RR) = 850 + 795 = 1,645 lbs
Cross weight =
1,645 ÷ 3,502 × 100 = 46.97%
That is low for circle track. The car may feel loose.
The calculator would suggest increasing wedge.
When to Recheck Cross Weight
- After spring changes
- After sway bar changes
- After ride height changes
- After moving ballast
- After major suspension work
Cross weight is not set once and forgotten.
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