Koni Rebuilding options

steveespo

Member
Joined
Sep 22, 2010
Posts
155
Reaction score
0
I have 2 front Koni Yellow Sport struts that have different issues and I was wondering where to send to have rebuilt. The first strut has a bad seal allowing the rod to sag down into the strut by gravity. The second has the adjuster seized so I can't adjust softer or firmer.
If anyone knows the contact info and typical cost for rebuild I'd appreciate it.
Thanks
Steve
 

Philostang

Chrome Hater
Joined
Dec 19, 2009
Posts
429
Reaction score
3
Location
Chicago
Konis have a lifetime warranty. My rear shocks were rebuilt by Koni (North America) under warranty. You have to send them a request form with the shocks. Once they get them the request and shocks are reviewed. Once approved, they send out new ones or rebuild what you sent. The turn around on all this can be long, so if you want they offer an option to pre-pay for any non-authorized product (basically, you're paying for new gear and if they honor the warranty they refund it).

I sent one with the same blown seal issue and another with seeping out of the shaft seal. They warrantied both and I had them back after about a month (from my house to them and back.

Best,
-j
 

brdollmeyer

Junior Member
Joined
Jun 19, 2013
Posts
12
Reaction score
0
By far your best bet:

Jeff Wong
ProPartsUSA
818-888-8904 then press 2

I've had Jeff do many revalves. He's always had them back to within a week of receiving them.
Extremely knowledgeable...many time SCCA National Champion
 

ren274u

Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2007
Posts
256
Reaction score
0
Location
North Carolina
Since were on the topic of koni shocks. I recently took mine out and when they are full stiff and I compress them all the way down by hand. They don't return to the fully extended position at the same time. One is a little faster than the other. Is this normal?
 

steveespo

Member
Joined
Sep 22, 2010
Posts
155
Reaction score
0
Since were on the topic of koni shocks. I recently took mine out and when they are full stiff and I compress them all the way down by hand. They don't return to the fully extended position at the same time. One is a little faster than the other. Is this normal?

I wouldn't sweat that as long as the difference isn't too extreme, say more than 10 seconds. My failed strut the rod drops all the way down in like 5-6 seconds after I fully extend it. No external leak on it which seems odd but I guess it can fail internally.
Steve
 

sheizasosay

Alive
Joined
Jun 28, 2011
Posts
1,024
Reaction score
4
I timed my dampers on low and max settings before I ever put them on so I would have a diagnostic reference . So when mine were new: 10/11 sec rebound on low . On high 28/30 seconds .
 

sheizasosay

Alive
Joined
Jun 28, 2011
Posts
1,024
Reaction score
4
I bought them new from Maximum Motorsports 11/19/12.
Steve

Hey Steve, if you remember, once you get your dampers rebuilt, would you time the return on low and max setting and post the results? Curious how far the variance is across production.

I realize this isn't exact science, but I think it would be a legit, rough indicator.
 

ren274u

Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2007
Posts
256
Reaction score
0
Location
North Carolina
There is no oil leaking, and it stays fully extended. They just go from full compressed to fully extended at slightly different speeds on full stiff or soft. But I haven't had any issue with them on the car.
 

Latest posts

Support us!

Support Us - Become A Supporting Member Today!

Click Here For Details

Back
Top