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#57 |
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Join Date: Jul 2012
Drives: S2000 CR
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#58 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2012
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The effect of rebound will be "felt more" than compression for the most part, but both are fairly apparent once you educate yourself on dialing in dampers. |
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to CSG Mike For This Useful Post: | donutfilling (05-14-2013), Hanakuso (05-14-2013) |
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#59 | |
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FWIW I'm currently running one down from max rebound, and 3 or 4 compression. I haven't spent much time on them yet as I haven't had enough free time on a weekend to mess with them (and to a point, the energy/care to mess with them, works been too crazy lately).
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Track cars: 2013 Scion FRS, 1998 Acura Integra Type-R, 1993 Honda Civic Hatchback DD: 2005 Acura TSX Tow: 2022 F-450 Toys: 2001 Chevrolet Corvette Z06, 1993 Toyota MR2 Turbo, 1994 Toyota MR2 Turbo, 1991 Mitsubishi Galant VR-4 Parts: 2015 Subaru BRZ Limited, 2005 Acura TSX Projects: 2013 Subaru BRZ Limited track car build FS: 2004 GMC Sierra 2500 LT CCSB 8.1/Allison with 99k miles |
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#60 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2012
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#61 | |
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My point was, springs are springs. |
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#62 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2012
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Gasoline is gasoline, right? To most people it doesn't matter, but to some it does... |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to CSG Mike For This Useful Post: | Jackson (05-15-2013) |
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#63 | |
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I disagree with this. There are some really crappy coilover springs out there. - andy Last edited by Racecomp Engineering; 05-15-2013 at 04:16 PM. |
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#64 | |
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Many race shocks may start with generic valving, but anyone dumping Penske money is likely custom valving anyways. For mass produced mid-market dampers that's not as likely and I'd be willing to bet that an R2 for these cars won't have the same valving as it would for an S197 mustang, etc. As for springs, go test some Swift springs and then some cheap eBay springs and see how close they both match the specified spring rate. At the end of the day, a coilover manufacturer can do research to pick good valving and spring rates for an OTS unit, or they can guess. Just because they do research on car X doesn't mean they did so with car Y, although that really relates more to the non-race specific shocks of course, which would include Eibach's offerings. I couldn't find any other OTS Eibach dynos to compare mine to, just the Evasive ones which were obviously drastically different.
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Track cars: 2013 Scion FRS, 1998 Acura Integra Type-R, 1993 Honda Civic Hatchback DD: 2005 Acura TSX Tow: 2022 F-450 Toys: 2001 Chevrolet Corvette Z06, 1993 Toyota MR2 Turbo, 1994 Toyota MR2 Turbo, 1991 Mitsubishi Galant VR-4 Parts: 2015 Subaru BRZ Limited, 2005 Acura TSX Projects: 2013 Subaru BRZ Limited track car build FS: 2004 GMC Sierra 2500 LT CCSB 8.1/Allison with 99k miles Last edited by Dave-ROR; 05-15-2013 at 04:02 PM. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Dave-ROR For This Useful Post: | TAP Auto Parts (05-15-2013) |
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#65 | |
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I don't see good damper/coilover companies making one application really good and the others suck. To put it a different way are your coilover kits for your STi super special from a development standpoint than your other applications? As far as the spring comment goes, my point was that assuming the quality of the spring is the same, it doesn't matter if its in the form of a coil spring, a leaf spring or a torsion bar. It isn't going to change how I'm going to tune it. One may have a preference for one application over another due to wanting the Cg in a certain place or ease of ride height adjustability, but what you really want is a solid spring rate across the travel. To put it another way, if I had a coil spring conversion on the rear of my 944 Spec race car, it wouldn't change how I tune it over the torsion bar. I'd shoot for similar wheel rates. |
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#66 |
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$0.02 on springs
Features of a good spring when comparing the same size and rate springs between manufacturers. * Spring rate consistency (i.e. matched pairs). Each spring will never be exactly the same rate but good springs are matched to be as close as possible to each other and to it's advertised rating before sold. * Spring rate consistency upon compression. Good springs will maintain their advertised rate as close as possible to it's rating upon compression. All springs get stiffer as you compress them. Which is also why coil springs behave differently than leaf springs or even torsion bars. * Light weight. By using better metallurgy they can create less windings and thinner spring wire diameter which cuts down on weight. Eibach specializing in springs. Perhaps they can weigh in if i'm off base here. Springs are not just springs but are you good enough of a driver to notice?
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| The Following User Says Thank You to RYU For This Useful Post: | Racecomp Engineering (05-15-2013) |
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#67 | |
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Crappy springs will go well beyond their advertised rates, sag, and generally suck. Often times feel much harsher than advertised. Lighter weight is a nice bonus, but priority number 1 is that the spring actually hits close to its advertised rate for the majority of its travel. * to be 100% honest, these percentages were mostly pulled from my ass. But it's around there. I just use Hyperco, Swift, Eibach, and KW and don't worry about it. - Andy |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Racecomp Engineering For This Useful Post: | CSG Mike (05-20-2013) |
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#68 |
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Join Date: May 2012
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Andy, you're pretty spot on. Good race springs will be close to their advertised rate but also hold this rate and height race after race. A lot of our coilover springs get used for off-road and they get beat to hell! Most of our springs still test true to their height and rate even after miles and miles of abuse.
Inferior springs will lose height and once that happens the rate changes and the graph isn't as linear. Then you run into ride height issues and rate inconsistencies. Some companies advertise "more travel" or "lighter weight" or "better material" and these are all things we want. But at the end of the day if the spring can't hold its integrity all those nice marketing features become obsolete. Attached is a random spring graph I pulled from the first test I found. Eibach tests 100% of the springs for rate, height, even side loads and coil count before they are boxed. Springs aren't just springs. |
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| The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Jackson For This Useful Post: | CSG Mike (05-20-2013), djdnz (05-17-2013), donutfilling (05-17-2013), Racecomp Engineering (05-20-2013) |
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#69 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Drives: Subaru BRZ Limited 6MT
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I installed mine - I'm just wondering if any others running them can give me some feedback.
It seems when the car is cold in the morning I get a little more noise up front. Almost like the sway bar is loose or something. I've validated all bots are on tight. The only thing I didn't do to spec was I just ran the reservoir lines up through the wheel wheel by pulling it back versus routing through the passage area. Just in general, it seems to have quite a bit more noise over bumps (almost like something is rattling). Anyone else have this? Second - The car seems very bouncy. I'm running: Front - 2 clicks compression, 1 click rebound (from softest setting) Rear - 1 click compression, 1 click rebound (from softest setting) The roads aren't super smooth but the car feels jarring to a degree. I've ran Bilstein PSS9s on my 911 and KW V3s on my M3 and haven't experienced this even turned up pretty stiff. Is anyone else experiencing this? BTW - Running the off-the-shelf spring rates (275/350)
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#70 | |
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Senior Member
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