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-   Suspension | Chassis | Brakes -- Sponsored by 949 Racing (https://www.ft86club.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=59)
-   -   Best street coilover (https://www.ft86club.com/forums/showthread.php?t=33888)

Mikepage 04-16-2013 10:03 AM

Best street coilover
 
Hi,

I plan to install a coilover set soon, what is the best coilover i can take for street use? Maybe some futur track days also.

My friend run on BC with a 350z and it feel confortable, what is your suggestions?

I look for Tein maybe : http://www.jscspeed.com/catalog/Scio...cion_FR_S.html

Mgivens 04-16-2013 11:49 AM

the BEST...in my opinion it is the Ohlins road and track... but at $3500 it aint cheap!

good luck, if i had the money i would get them in a second...

if i was a t a lower budget i would try the AST set

of, even lower budget get the Koni inserts with RCE springs!

Huehuecoyotl 04-16-2013 11:51 AM

he said street
what are you gonna do with ohlins on the street, LOL

Mikepage 04-16-2013 11:56 AM

Yeah i have already read a lot on the RCE springs but i plan to use my car during winter and maybe with the coilover, i can adjust the height before the winter season begin.

shu5892001 04-16-2013 11:57 AM

kw v3, stainless steel which won't rust or seize as easily in Canadian salted winter

Dave-ROR 04-16-2013 11:59 AM

Stock.

IMO.

Mgivens 04-16-2013 11:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Huehuecoyotl (Post 869099)
he said street
what are you gonna do with ohlins on the street, LOL

Ohlins is overkill, but they seem to have made it for the street...their discription "The focus has been clearn from the very beginning - superior road handling without sacrificing comfort in your day-to-day transports."

Dave-ROR 04-16-2013 12:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Huehuecoyotl (Post 869099)
he said street
what are you gonna do with ohlins on the street, LOL

If you want higher spring rates but OEM ride quality then high end dampers are the answer. I've been in very highly sprung cars running high end Showa dampers, Penske, etc that feel as comfortable as stock, just more controlled.

Try that with BC dampers and you'll get that "It's a performance suspension" ride...

Huehuecoyotl 04-16-2013 12:09 PM

GC makes a affordable height adjustable perch option that may be for you and still ride better than a cheapy set of coilovers

http://www.ground-control-store.com/...ion.php?II=923

.look into it.

Grimlock 04-16-2013 12:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mikepage (Post 869106)
Yeah i have already read a lot on the RCE springs but i plan to use my car during winter and maybe with the coilover, i can adjust the height before the winter season begin.

How low do you seriously plan on going?

speed6sam 04-16-2013 12:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dave-ROR (Post 869136)
If you want higher spring rates but OEM ride quality then high end dampers are the answer. I've been in very highly sprung cars running high end Showa dampers, Penske, etc that feel as comfortable as stock, just more controlled.

Try that with BC dampers and you'll get that "It's a performance suspension" ride...

Have you ever actually taken a car with properly setup BC Racing coilovers for a ride?

Dave-ROR 04-16-2013 12:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by speed6sam (Post 869208)
Have you ever actually taken a car with properly setup BC Racing coilovers for a ride?

I've been in 3 or 4 cars with BC coilovers. I can't say whether or not they've been properly setup (I didn't mess with them at all).

Have you ever been in a 1,200lb spring rate car on high end dampers that rides like stock?

speed6sam 04-16-2013 12:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dave-ROR (Post 869214)
I've been in 3 or 4 cars with BC coilovers. I can't say whether or not they've been properly setup (I didn't mess with them at all).

Have you ever been in a 1,200lb spring rate car on high end dampers that rides like stock?

I honestly can't say Ive been in a car with 20-22k spring rates, The most I have ridden in was 16k front and 14k rear which translates to 899lbs front and 787lbs rear.

I am sure that was very impressive and at the same time very expensive. I run 564lb springs front and rear in my personal car and thats plenty comfortable for myself personally and performs well from the little testing I have been able to do.

I do have to say however that if a guy doesn't set their suspension up properly no matter what kit they have, it'll ride horribly. It seems to me that a lot of the people that buy BC's usually throw them on and adjust them incorrectly then post negative reviews on the forums.

Dave-ROR 04-16-2013 12:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by speed6sam (Post 869269)
I do have to say however that if a guy doesn't set their suspension up properly no matter what kit they have, it'll ride horribly. It seems to me that a lot of the people that buy BC's usually throw them on and adjust them incorrectly then post negative reviews on the forums.

I'd agree with that across the board.. not just BCs..

Although I haven't seen that many negative reviews. The high end damper guys don't respect the whole 'anodize it another color and put a different sticker on it' sales methodology, that's most of the negative comments I see about them.

In the end, they simply can't compete with 2, 3, 4 way dampers, regressive valving, etc when it comes to controlling higher spring rates over varied shock velocities.

Having said that, if the street was my only concern, I'd still say stock lol


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