stlwagon
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- May 9, 2007
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Yep.. just take them apart and hand lube them.Thanks for the heads up...you're talking about the bushings that slip over the ends and get bolted to the axle close to the wheels, right?
Yep.. just take them apart and hand lube them.Thanks for the heads up...you're talking about the bushings that slip over the ends and get bolted to the axle close to the wheels, right?
Thanks... do the other ones, the ones that are termed "endlinks" I think, also require lubing?Yep.. just take them apart and hand lube them.
Yes they do.Thanks... do the other ones, the ones that are termed "endlinks" I think, also require lubing?
That would be very useful. We take a drive in mine, then yours...on exactly the same roads. PM sent.i have the eibachs and tokico combination on mine and rides pretty good for being lowered. We are gonna need to meet up here in houston for a ride and drive comparison on springs... lol
If you upgrade the rear always upgrade the front.
Actually, my rule is if you upgrade the front, then upgrade the rear.
A stiffer rear bar may be all you need. Especially if you are only trying to get rid of some push.
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+1, that's what I did and the effect it had. Swapped the rear stocker for the thicker BMR, and it got rid of push...very neutral now
I want to do the D-Specs but also realized that I might benefit from buying them in "kit" form including the front and rear stabilzer bars. I see a few out there... what to do. I want the "best".
I want to buy the best for high speed cornering. I want a corner carver. Please suggest the best out there now for me. VENDORS I invite your quotes. I would like to get front/rear sway bars and tokico d-specs as well. I only have the Roush rear springs currently.
Although it doesn't have the Tokico's, the Roush Stage II kit, which was recently tested by MotorTrend in a Tuner Stang test, had the best corner-carver objective improvement and ride/handling compromise. F & R sway bards, struts/shocks, springs and STB. The Shelby GT-C with the fFRPP handling pack handled objectively better, but the ride deteriorated significantly and on the street with bumps midcorner it semmed to get unsettled much more than the Roush. The only other corner-carver thing I'd suggest is a Watt's Link ($400, Fays or Lakewood).
Yes, that is nice, and when I have more miles on my shocks/struts I will probably do the Roush setup.I am really happy with my setup and would not change it. But the numbers on the roush package are really nice and the drop is just about perfect too.
It is sort of nice to know exactly what you are going to get (track times, skidpad, etc)