jayel579
Member
Have $: buy Koni STR.T's
Have $$: buy Koni Sports
Have $$$$: buy KW/AST
have $$$$$$$: buy **MCS/JRZ**
I edited this one for you
Have $: buy Koni STR.T's
Have $$: buy Koni Sports
Have $$$$: buy KW/AST
have $$$$$$$: buy **MCS/JRZ**
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Seriously? I glanced through it quick enough to get the gist, but no one gives him any shit over something that's been beaten more than anything in this subforum? Are we that bored? Should we make another sticky to ignore?
Have $: buy Koni STR.T's
Have $$: buy Koni Sports
Have $$$$: buy KW/AST
have $$$$$$$: buy Moton/Penske
For real answer for the OP (and that may accidentally search for it and come across this):
Are you making money racing your car? No? On a budget but want "the best"? You'll be more than happy with Koni STR.T's
But don't coilovers give you reduced suspension travel compared with standard springs and shocks? Which is to say, aren't you more likely to hit the stops when driving on the street than you would with standard springs/shocks, even if the ride height is the same (since coilovers achieve their ride height adjustability by moving the entire assembly, while ride height variation with standard springs is achieved by varying the length and rate of the spring)?
^^ thats what I was thinking. I want a little better ride than I have now and I drove a friends 5.0 that had BC coils and it was terrible. He now has Konis and K springs and is much happier. I'm all sorts of undecided now lol
Yes, any time you lower the vehicle you will have reduced suspension travel. Doesn't matter if you have coilovers or not. So don't "slam" the vehicle.
That's not entirely true. Tokico D-Specs + Steeda Sports rode worse than my Ground Control Coilover kits with over double the front spring rate (440 vs 200) and a 25 lbs/in increase in the rear (200 vs 175). Biggest change is that the dampers are valved correctly to have it not ride like ass. Cheap coilovers ride like ass because the valving is off and the dampers don't dampen the spring correctly.
I personally don't recommend cheap coilovers. I like my Ground Controls and at $1650 shipped to my door they are a bargain of solid performance parts. Good camber plates, good dampers and good springs. Also not the best but certainly better than any of the low end coilover kits that are barely more expensive than a good set of shocks/struts, springs and camber plates.
I've also heard that the AST 4150's ride pretty nice with those trick digressive damping curves.
For most people coilovers will be over kill. For those of us looking for a more competitive car, the freedom in spring choice and damping is HUGE for tuning the car.
Yes, any time you lower the vehicle you will have reduced suspension travel. Doesn't matter if you have coilovers or not. So don't "slam" the vehicle.
Actually, I want relatively minimal drop, a ride height in the front no lower than that of the Boss 302. From my aesthetic point of view, the ride height (as measured by the gap between the top of the tire and the fender) of the 2013/2014 GT500 is just about perfect.What are your goals with the car? If you just want it to look cool, just slam the mofo to the ground and forget about it.
No, with a properly designed coilover, your suspension travel is fine. You're LESS likely to hit stops because you can run higher rate springs and your dampers will be up to the task of controlling them. Coilovers do not achieve adjustability by moving the "entire assembly." There is a threaded collar that you turn to change the lower spring perch height relative to the strut.


performance w/ budget? call strano. you're 99% of the way there (or more) and can focus on what REALLY matters
performance w/ needs you can specifically articulate with a local builder to work with through multiple valving iterations w/o a budget to get that last 1%? take an evo school. go to nats, re-evaluate, rinse, repeat. multiple times. then call your investment advisor
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Okay, I think I follow, but that still means that the suspension travel of coilovers is fixed regardless of what the ride height is adjusted to.
While you can run higher spring rates and have that be properly controlled by the dampers, the problem here is that stiffer springs yield higher compression rates and, thus, a firmer ride compared with a suspension with longer travel, correspondingly lower spring rates, and dampers well-suited to them.
What I'm after is maximum ride quality for a given ride height. Since my aesthetic sense prefers a wheel gap about that of what you'll find on a stock 2013/2014 GT500, and I'll be running 285/35-19 tires on all 4 corners, my question is: which gives me more suspension travel for that, a good coilover setup adjusted for that aesthetic, or a standard spring setup that gives me that aesthetic?
Thanks. I've considered those.
However, they're expensive (though, actually, perhaps not so expensive after you factor in the Vorshlag camber plates), nonadjustable, and I don't know anyone who has it, so I can't determine ahead of time whether it will ride the way I would like it to. There's also the issue that you get to choose which springs to use with it, and that raises the question of whether the dampers are specifically rate-matched in compression and rebound to the springs you choose or if they're "one size fits all".
Fortunately, I have plenty of time. I don't intend to make any changes to the springs and shocks until I've taken my GT to at least two or three track sessions in stock form. On the street, I'm very impressed with the GT's cornering (I have the track package). It's nice and flat and very precise. But it's really only on the track that you can safely take these cars to any sort of limit.
Thanks. I've considered those.
However, they're expensive (though, actually, perhaps not so expensive after you factor in the Vorshlag camber plates), nonadjustable, and I don't know anyone who has it, so I can't determine ahead of time whether it will ride the way I would like it to. There's also the issue that you get to choose which springs to use with it, and that raises the question of whether the dampers are specifically rate-matched in compression and rebound to the springs you choose or if they're "one size fits all".
Fortunately, I have plenty of time. I don't intend to make any changes to the springs and shocks until I've taken my GT to at least two or three track sessions in stock form. On the street, I'm very impressed with the GT's cornering (I have the track package). It's nice and flat and very precise. But it's really only on the track that you can safely take these cars to any sort of limit.
I wanted coilovers badly when building out my suspension parts list but like you I had some ride height requirements I needed to deal with.
All of the coilovers I would even consider purchasing had a Minimum drop beyond what I was looking for in order to keep them off of their internal bump stops within the damper housing.
Some of them would allow you to drop the car the equivalent of a Steeda Sport spring combo but the problem is you would be running the coilover in its upper most range of motion in doing so. There would be plenty of motion range in a full droop scenario but not so much in a bump scenario as you would already be living at the top of the bump range to begin with. Unless you have a double adjustable damper you may run into issues with bump and you may even greatly shorten the lifespan of the coilover running it in that upper range all the time.
I ended up making a sacrifice and getting a spring/shock combo because I felt it would be better suited to my 4x4 is'h ride height requirements.
You got that backwards, if you run a set of coilovers up high you have tons of bump travel and little droop travel since in bump travel the strut body moves upward!That's assuming the ride height isn't done at the actual strut mounting ears. Ohlins have that feature and my buddy uses it exclusively in adjusting ride height on his Evo IX SE.
