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-   -   Increasing Rake (https://www.ft86club.com/forums/showthread.php?t=145226)

golemslord 05-06-2021 12:28 PM

Increasing Rake
 
Hi,


I currently have Tein flex Z on 18x9.5+35 wheels with 245/35 tires

Front is maxed out low around maybe half a finger gap (cannot fit one finger) from fender
Rear is at around 2 finger gap from fender

(I do have thin fingers for reference lollllll)

Will this cause too much over steer or negatively affect balance? and is this amount of rake too much?

Planning to go with around -2 camber front and -1.5 rear

Reason being for this setup is that the rear coils are seized.. rip

(I do like the look of little rake though)

NoHaveMSG 05-06-2021 01:54 PM

It isn't going to make that much of a difference, I ran that much rake before just messing around and it loosened up the rear of the car a bit, but it was manageable. I do not recommend running Flex Z's that low unless you are going for that slammed look specifically. They get really unsettled when they are on the bumpstops. I found my car was quicker on track when I ran it at a slightly higher ride height when I had Flex Z's as it was more forgiving to drive.

RayRay88 05-06-2021 04:52 PM

You really want to measure from hub to top of the fender arch and compare that to the oem reference numbers to really get accurate ride height. Finger gaps aren't very accurate or comparable.

I'm pretty sure oem rake is somewhere around 1/2 an inch higher in the rear, I would try to not stray to far from this if you want to keep stock like balance.

Best way is to corner balance the car.

marco_mc22 05-06-2021 06:00 PM

With that ride height on those coils oversteer is the latest of your problems..

golemslord 05-06-2021 06:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by marco_mc22 (Post 3430302)
With that ride height on those coils oversteer is the latest of your problems..


In other words I shouldn't even worry about it right

churchx 05-06-2021 11:59 PM

Right. Ones that prioritize slamming above everything and are willing to sacrifice everything for that, including denying suspension any ability to do it's job, shouldn't worry about handling. Car handles badly? Drive is uncomfortable? You got your slamming down, it was your goal, live with that. Ones that got coilovers for their function, don't do overlowering past recommended ranges, don't slam car for it to rest on bumpstops and require various extra suspension mods eg. diff riser and roll center adjustment mods.

golemslord 05-07-2021 11:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by churchx (Post 3430398)
Right. Ones that prioritize slamming above everything and are willing to sacrifice everything for that, including denying suspension any ability to do it's job, shouldn't worry about handling. Car handles badly? Drive is uncomfortable? You got your slamming down, it was your goal, live with that. Ones that got coilovers for their function, don't do overlowering past recommended ranges, don't slam car for it to rest on bumpstops and require various extra suspension mods eg. diff riser and roll center adjustment mods.


I get what you mean but my car isn't slammed at all, I had TRD springs for like 3 years and recently got the coils. Although the front is maxed, it's not that low (wheels not tucked or anything). Rears are basically TRD height

If anything I feel it drives better than the TRD springs

churchx 05-07-2021 01:21 PM

Not overslammed in my book for these cars would be within inch of stock height. Handling is not measured in finger gaps. There most probably was mentioned in manual of coilovers, what advised range would be. NoHaveMSG rightely advised, that coilovers overlowered till resting on bumpstops is hardly best choice for suspension actually do it's job. That, in addition of suspension geometry issues appearing once one lowers past 20-30mm and increased wear of rear axles CV joints.
Twins are not that high and their suspension travel is not that long to begin with. What seemed "not a lot" of lowering for old cars with 2-3x times suspension travel and double the stock ground clearance, is often way too much for these. Of course, owner is free to do whatever he wants from his car according to priorities, but better if one knows what is sacrificed by that and if price of reduced function paid for form is worth it.

golemslord 05-07-2021 02:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by churchx (Post 3430524)
Not overslammed in my book for these cars would be within inch of stock height. Handling is not measured in finger gaps. There most probably was mentioned in manual of coilovers, what advised range would be. NoHaveMSG rightely advised, that coilovers overlowered till resting on bumpstops is hardly best choice for suspension actually do it's job. That, in addition of suspension geometry issues appearing once one lowers past 20-30mm and increased wear of rear axles CV joints.
Twins are not that high and their suspension travel is not that long to begin with. What seemed "not a lot" of lowering for old cars with 2-3x times suspension travel and double the stock ground clearance, is often way too much for these. Of course, owner is free to do whatever he wants from his car according to priorities, but better if one knows what is sacrificed by that and if price of reduced function paid for form is worth it.


Yeah that's a good point. I ran TRD for 3 years and just thought the front was too high with the gap..ill monitor to see if any issues for the front and can raise it up if anything

Surprisingly my CV axle is starting to leak/click and it is before I installed coil overs. I guess it's normal wear and tear from 6 year ownership


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