Coilovers... the proper way.
#21
It's not a mild drop, it's an optimal one. You can only take a tC so low before the suspension geometry starts working against you-- and the point of diminishing returns comes on pretty quickly.
#22
Originally Posted by Dr_Isotope
It's not a mild drop, it's an optimal one. You can only take a tC so low before the suspension geometry starts working against you-- and the point of diminishing returns comes on pretty quickly.
#24
completley understand what u mean.. but really thats a matter of opinion as usual.. i guess the owner can decide whats "best" for whatever they are going for..
other than that i am jealous of ur fancy setup
other than that i am jealous of ur fancy setup
#25
Yep, the 2 inch drop is terrible for handling all the way around. And to make it worse, a lot of those springs have spring rates that are WAY too low for the drop to attempt at a smoother ride.. again, a terrible setup. It is interesting to see someone on S-techs autox... then get rid of those springs asap for a trd like drop so the car actually handles well I wouldnt even think about dropping mine more than docs, as I care about handling too much.
Probably 90% or more of people who drop their cars damage its handling by going too low, not stiff enough, etc.
Probably 90% or more of people who drop their cars damage its handling by going too low, not stiff enough, etc.
#26
yeah thats what im saying there are different bests for different situations like i said in an earlier post this set up good for auto xing.. s techs look hot in the street and everyone who is dropped on s techs will say the tc handles better than at stock ride height and im sure it handles like a champ on coilovers so really im just agreeing with everyone
#27
I have never heard anyone that has truly pushed the car (unless they just dont want to admit a bad choice) say the car handles better on s-techs. It hits the bump stops under even mildly hard cornering, it handles like a box of crap on stechs under any sort of hard driving. The thing is that most people who think they know how their car handles have never really pushed it. Taking some fast turns on the street every now and then tells them nothing, yet they think it handles better because it is lower. Until you really take it out and flog it you have no idea what it does. The very first thing I have heard people say after really driving it hard on s-techs is "it was bouncy as hell.. riding on the bump stops in the corners" . And it is no surprise since the stechs need to be about 3 times as stiff as they are for the drop they provide. There is a whole thread on yoursciontc.com with the rates and drops listed.. it becomes very apparent how poorly designed most of these springs are by looking at that.
Now, I do agree with you that for some, looks are all that matters since they basically drive back and forth to work. If they like the slammed look (I personally dont at all) and dont care about handling at all, then I guess the stechs are good for them. But in no way should s-techs and better handling be used in the same sentence
Not bashing your posts, just providing more info.
Now, I do agree with you that for some, looks are all that matters since they basically drive back and forth to work. If they like the slammed look (I personally dont at all) and dont care about handling at all, then I guess the stechs are good for them. But in no way should s-techs and better handling be used in the same sentence
Not bashing your posts, just providing more info.
#31
Can you take me through the process of corner-balancing? I am not sure what is being adjusted. I guess once you get the ride height set and the alignment settings in order, you can start playing with the damper levels? Is that what is being adjusted to be read off of the scales or is it something else?
I am very interested in this as I want to try my hand at auto-x come Spring; and I just so happen to have coilovers sitting in the garage.
I am very interested in this as I want to try my hand at auto-x come Spring; and I just so happen to have coilovers sitting in the garage.
#32
As you could see on the scale readout, every wheel has a different amount of weight on it. So corner balancing is the simple (or not so simple) process of tweaking the spring preload at each corner until the car has a perfect 50% crossweight. This is with the swaybars disconnected.
Once the cross is right, hook up the sways one at a time and see if anything gets thrown out of whack. The rear bar was neutral at my modest drop, but the front had about 60lbs of loading on it. We fabbed up beefy, NASCAR-sized endlinks out of 1/2-20 Heims, bungs, 1" steel tube, and Grade 10.9 hardware. It was a very minor tweak-- the passenger side link is about 3/16" shorter than the driver's side.
Once I get my memory to put everything in order, I can update the top post with a basic checklist for corner balancing.
Once the cross is right, hook up the sways one at a time and see if anything gets thrown out of whack. The rear bar was neutral at my modest drop, but the front had about 60lbs of loading on it. We fabbed up beefy, NASCAR-sized endlinks out of 1/2-20 Heims, bungs, 1" steel tube, and Grade 10.9 hardware. It was a very minor tweak-- the passenger side link is about 3/16" shorter than the driver's side.
Once I get my memory to put everything in order, I can update the top post with a basic checklist for corner balancing.
#33
hey where can i locate scales and all to do this....im pretty slammed now(mostly for looks) but i want to be able to adjust it to optimum when i want to auto-x...
also what is the formula for cross weight? like RR+FL=1/2 car weight?
also what is the formula for cross weight? like RR+FL=1/2 car weight?
#34
there are several sites about corner balancing on the internet.....some of it is hard to understand.I am still trying to figure it all out myself,butit makes a big differance on the track.
#39
Originally Posted by Dr_Isotope
As you could see on the scale readout, every wheel has a different amount of weight on it. So corner balancing is the simple (or not so simple) process of tweaking the spring preload at each corner until the car has a perfect 50% crossweight. This is with the swaybars disconnected.
Once the cross is right, hook up the sways one at a time and see if anything gets thrown out of whack. The rear bar was neutral at my modest drop, but the front had about 60lbs of loading on it. We fabbed up beefy, NASCAR-sized endlinks out of 1/2-20 Heims, bungs, 1" steel tube, and Grade 10.9 hardware. It was a very minor tweak-- the passenger side link is about 3/16" shorter than the driver's side.
Once I get my memory to put everything in order, I can update the top post with a basic checklist for corner balancing.
Once the cross is right, hook up the sways one at a time and see if anything gets thrown out of whack. The rear bar was neutral at my modest drop, but the front had about 60lbs of loading on it. We fabbed up beefy, NASCAR-sized endlinks out of 1/2-20 Heims, bungs, 1" steel tube, and Grade 10.9 hardware. It was a very minor tweak-- the passenger side link is about 3/16" shorter than the driver's side.
Once I get my memory to put everything in order, I can update the top post with a basic checklist for corner balancing.