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BRZ First-Gen (2012+) — General Topics All discussions about the first-gen Subaru BRZ coupe

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Old 08-19-2018, 02:04 AM   #15
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Originally Posted by MrClean614 View Post
Appreciate you chiming in to share this - helps align expectations. I’m going to attempt to make the Sachs dampeners work with some Eibach Pro Kit springs for now. Depending on how this goes and how much I get into tracking the car, probably consider Ohlins R&T coil overs.

Have a read IRT bump stops and suspension travel in the 86 platform.
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Old 08-19-2018, 03:59 AM   #16
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Thanks nikitopo!

Taking my first roundabouts tonight, noticed the BRZ has some understeer dialed in from the factory to be safer but I’d like things to be more nuetral. Nothing crazy (yet) but more playful.

I remember seeing a YouTube review of the ‘13 FRS and BRZ which indicated the FRS was setup for more tail happiness when compared to the BRZ. That made me wonder if that TRD suspension setup would take care of this.

Found it:

EverydayDriver video from 5:30 on covers this.
Yes that is true. You can dial out the understeer with a bigger front sway bar. I have a set of sway bars from Laile Japan with a +1mm bigger front and a +1mm bigger rear with a 2 hole setting. This helps to change the softness depending your needs. They are new. The TRD ones look to me very large on the front. You don't want to go very large, especially if you are thinking to go in future with coilovers. Send me a PM if you are interested and I can create a relevant post to sell them.
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Old 08-19-2018, 12:24 PM   #17
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In the past, I’ve done Eibach Pro Kit springs with success for my street driving objectives: reduce wheel well gap for better appearance, plus slightly higher spring rates that combine with a lower center of gravity for incrementally improved driving dynamics that work well with factory dampeners.

That said, I thought the TRD setup with Eibach sourced springs may accomplish these objectives, including the desire to dial in more neutral handling toward the limit, while preserving the inherent fun of the factory setup.

TRD vs. PP specs for the sway bars...

Fronts: 20.6mm TRD vs. 18 mm for PP
Rears: 15.8mm TRD vs. 15 mm for PP

I see the TRD sway bars are slightly larger than the PP setup which answers my initial question. However, going to adjustable sway bars may be better in the long run.

Now I need to determine if it’s worth going with ala carte choices versus getting the TRD package deal.

Driving each would tell me what I need to know.

Anyone out there in Ohio that have done a spring and sway bar approach?

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Old 08-20-2018, 07:17 AM   #18
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IMO, if you are keeping the OEM dampers, I would go the springs first and see how that effects the handling characteristics, then if required look at bars.

As for swaybar, bigger isn't always better, and you rarely need to swap out front and back.

Me, I don't rate the Sachs dampers all that much, they are better than standard dampers, but not that much, I'm going for some good local coilovers, 6kg F, 4.5kg R with some well thought out dampening for my use.

Then, if required, I'll look at sway bars, either front or rear, adjustable, maybe bigger, maybe smaller, and only enough to give me my desired result.

There's lots of good info IRT finding the best setup with alignment, springs, dampers and bars, search through all the motorsport forums that focus on a RWD platform.

Tyre pressure play a big part as well.

You need to look at the whole package not one part of a package that has multiple parts.

An easy way to cheat is to go to your local track and see what the fast guys are using, generally the fast privateers generally only change out parts that are required to be changed.

Last edited by 86MLR; 08-20-2018 at 07:34 AM.
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Old 08-21-2018, 08:04 AM   #19
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Originally Posted by weederr33 View Post
Thanks!! I'm glad you got the RUF reference.

I have owned both sets. On my previous FR-S, I had the TRD springs (although it was with the '13 shocks). I liked both. Not too harsh, imo, and also the right amount of drop without having to go to coilovers. They both sat around an inch. I haven't noticed much of a difference but never measured either.
Personally, I think the Sachs with the Eibachs are damn near perfect. Though if I were to suggest an alternative, I'd steer you towards the RCE yellows.
As a fellow '17 PP driver, I think weederr is onto something with his recommendation. The Sachs dampers are a quality product and Subaru did thorough development with the suspension (including tires) as a whole. There's a lot of magic in this chassis that makes it worthwhile to go slowly changing it. Definitely a one thing at a time deal.

I understand wanting to drop the wheel gap, but I didn't see specific things you feel need correcting. Often understeer is related to tires as much as/more than suspension on a well-sorted car. I like the Primacies for their eagerness to oversteer with input, because to me "slow in fast out" is fun. But grippier tires will allow faster entry to turns. This is obvious when I leave my RS4s on the car for a few days after track days.

If you can't live without coilovers (for a street driven car, I think you can, but it's your car) don't get anything that costs $500. CSG developed a set of Teins with the company for our cars that are worth looking at and Ohlins Road & Track are great quality. But I'd still recommend wearing out a set of tires before you make any big changes.
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Old 08-21-2018, 08:47 AM   #20
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Originally Posted by MrClean614 View Post
Ohlins R&T coil overs.
Good luck when those dampers blow within a year.
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Old 08-21-2018, 08:51 AM   #21
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Here's the optional optional performance package.











https://www.sti.jp/parts/subarubrz_zc/

https://www.japanparts.com/
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Old 08-21-2018, 09:27 AM   #22
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Good luck when those dampers blow within a year.
Can you share more details ??
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Old 08-21-2018, 09:52 AM   #23
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Good luck when those dampers blow within a year.
I've been running Swift BRZ Sport springs (similar rates to Eibach Pro-kit) with factory dampers on my PP daily-driver. Have about 10k miles and 9 track days on them. No prob so far...

I think this supposed issue of stiffer lowering springs causing "blown shocks" is overstated a bit...

I would say that if you are going to run lowering springs and also plan to run camber plates, be very careful as some camber plates lose you a fair amount of bump travel due to positioning of a radial bearing below the spherical bearing. If you're planning on running camber plates, you might not want to lower the car more than 3/4" or so. I.e., RCE Yellows...
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Old 08-21-2018, 09:56 AM   #24
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JSube View Post
As a fellow '17 PP driver, I think weederr is onto something with his recommendation. The Sachs dampers are a quality product and Subaru did thorough development with the suspension (including tires) as a whole. There's a lot of magic in this chassis that makes it worthwhile to go slowly changing it. Definitely a one thing at a time deal.

I understand wanting to drop the wheel gap, but I didn't see specific things you feel need correcting. Often understeer is related to tires as much as/more than suspension on a well-sorted car. I like the Primacies for their eagerness to oversteer with input, because to me "slow in fast out" is fun. But grippier tires will allow faster entry to turns. This is obvious when I leave my RS4s on the car for a few days after track days.

If you can't live without coilovers (for a street driven car, I think you can, but it's your car) don't get anything that costs $500. CSG developed a set of Teins with the company for our cars that are worth looking at and Ohlins Road & Track are great quality. But I'd still recommend wearing out a set of tires before you make any big changes.
I have always felt that the knee jerk reaction to changing suspension in this car is due to the fact that it is indeed required in many other cars. If you are ricing out a Civic DX then yes the very first thing you have to do is get rid of the stock suspension since it is designed for day to day grocery getting not performance. The Twins suspension may have a few light compromises for mass production but the components and system overall are designed from the start for performance. Not just the Sachs but the "normal" suspension components in these cars are as good as most and better than many aftermarket parts. The whole idea of all stock parts being crap and all aftermarket ones being better is a huge mistake.


If somebody just wants to lower their car for normal street use there is nothing wrong with getting a set of decent quality lowering springs and leaving the other stock parts as is. They are a quality set up and can be adjusted for normal street use. There is no way on earth that you should be hitting performance levels on the street where changing the whole suspension system makes that big a difference in the car's handling..


Now, if talking track then we have a whole different ball game. The stock setup will still be perfectly fine for the skill and ability of the majority of drivers doing casual track or even auto X. If you have reached a level where your driving has surpassed the stock engineering then it is time to start looking at adjustable dampers, more variable camber adjustment and different sized sway bars. The thing is that people that have reached that level of driving skill know exactly what they need to know and just do it. They do not need to come on forums asking what they need.
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Old 08-21-2018, 11:35 AM   #25
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I've been running Swift BRZ Sport springs (similar rates to Eibach Pro-kit) with factory dampers on my PP daily-driver.
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Originally Posted by nikitopo View Post
Can you share more details ??
I meant Ohlins Road & Track coilovers not anything else.

I remembered reading reports years ago on the Interweb and here about the Japanese made Ohlins Road and Track DFV damper units (Ohlins doesn't make these I think the maker is called Pioneer, not the audio company) having failure after rather low mileage and owners being refused warranty claims.

My only experience with Sachs... I was reading off Sachs Germany's website that for OEM shocks they have different grades of cartridges with different constructions. For example the shock cartridges that came in the Audi A4 were vastly better constructed than the ones that came in the A3 / VW Golf line. So I was convinced the aftermarket products probably came with the nicer stuff. I eventually replaced my stock Golf GTI Sachs dampers with some cheap Eibach Pro-Kit Sachs dampers (that were rated to even handle their Sportline springs) and got much better rebound control over bumpy roads when paired with the German spec Votex Eibach Pro-Kit springs. It felt like the car was constantly sucked down to the road. Not that the stock shocks were bad, just didn't noticed they offered a much more cushy ride.

I know Sachs offers some really hardcore aftermarket consumer stuff in Germany and Japan, probably even crazier than their local competitors like KW and Bilstein, so their R&D should be right up there with the top tier. But everything is built to a cost that you are willing to pay especially OEM.

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Old 08-21-2018, 01:17 PM   #26
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I meant Ohlins Road & Track coilovers not anything else.

I remembered reading reports years ago on the Interweb and here about the Japanese made Ohlins Road and Track DFV damper units (Ohlins doesn't make these I think the maker is called Pioneer, not the audio company) having failure after rather low mileage and owners being refused warranty claims.

My only experience with Sachs... I was reading off Sachs Germany's website that for OEM shocks they have different grades of cartridges with different constructions. For example the shock cartridges that came in the Audi A4 were vastly better constructed than the ones that came in the A3 / VW Golf line. So I was convinced the aftermarket products probably came with the nicer stuff. I eventually replaced my stock Golf GTI Sachs dampers with some cheap Eibach Pro-Kit Sachs dampers (that were rated to even handle their Sportline springs) and got much better rebound control over bumpy roads when paired with the German spec Votex Eibach Pro-Kit springs. It felt like the car was constantly sucked down to the road. Not that the stock shocks were bad, just didn't noticed they offered a much more cushy ride.

I know Sachs offers some really hardcore aftermarket consumer stuff in Germany and Japan, probably even crazier than their local competitors like KW and Bilstein, so their R&D should be right up there with the top tier. But everything is built to a cost that you are willing to pay especially OEM.
Not sure about years ago on the internet, but my local race shop installs Ohlins R&T on lots of cars, 10+ sets per year. It's the first coilover they recommend for cars that do both street and track days.
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Old 08-21-2018, 01:42 PM   #27
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Sorry got confused with Pioneer Carrozzeria audio.

The maker of the Ohlins Road & Track coilovers is named Labo Carrozzeria Japan.
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Old 08-21-2018, 02:02 PM   #28
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I have at least 20k miles and 16 or so track days on the Ohlins R&T coilovers on my FD. A friend and competitor in time trials has R&T coilovers on his daily/time-rial BRZ and hasn't had any issues.

As far as I've known they're highly regarded for function and durability despite not being the higher-end Swedish Ohlins...
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