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Suspension help.
Finally got forgestars and installed them so now its time for lowering too make it look perfect.
Not going to track car or race just daily driver. Lower car now or wait few weeks and save for coilover r1/r2 kit? Will the cost be justified by the performance of coilovers on a daily driver? Also I dont feel comfortable compressing springs by myself any shop recommendations in south fort worth area or someone I can pay to have this done? |
You don't need a spring compressor. I removed the fronts with just an impact, you just need to HOLD it tight. Rears take like 5 minutes.
Cheap good setup is Koni SRT.T Non adjustables and Steeda Sport Springs. Great look and very good daily driver setup with no harshness. I would not waste money on coilovers unless you want it slammed or need better spring selection and adjust-ability. |
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I do agree that you don't need coil-overs for mostly street use, you will not push the components hard enough on the street to justify the cost, especially when you can get the same look for a fraction of a set of coil-overs. I have less than $300 including shipping in my set up and could not be happier with the performance and the looks. I have pics in the SR Lowering springs and J&M Panhard bar thread. |
Thanks for info now looking for someone to install it, i'll mess with really anything on a car except suspension or ac items.
so is panhard a worthwhile investment or will just springs alone be good? |
You need a pgb
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I just got done installing Koni STR.T with hotchkis sport springs on abou 5 cars this week. Everyone loves them and the price right now is pretty damn hard to beat. You will most likely need a PHB, not for a suspension upgrade per se but to align your rear axle.
Give us a shout, we have plenty of koni and Hotchkis in stock. |
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yes, to be safe use a spring compressor. disregard my method lol :)
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had some amazon gc's to use so ordered hotchkins springs and bar.
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Do u need an adjustable phb just to drop the heighth 1.5 inches? I got some lowering sprkngs and would love to put them on but If the phb is recommended I'll just buy one before doing the work all together
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Holy cow... No, when installing lowering springs on a coilover/McPherson strut car like the Mustang you DO need a spring compressor. Very much so! A typical S197 front spring makes about 100-110 pounds of force per inch of compression, and the stock spring is compressed about 4", even at full droop... so there are 400+ pounds of force ready to come loose when you zing off the strut top nut.
Here are some step-by-step pictures below that show the process of installing a lowering spring on an S197: http://vorshlag.smugmug.com/Instruct...camber-plates/ http://vorshlag.smugmug.com/Instruct...DSC_6022-S.jpg http://vorshlag.smugmug.com/Instruct...DSC_6024-S.jpg Granted, that is a camber plate install gallery, but most of the steps apply to doing a lowering spring install. You still have to remove the strut assembly from the car, compress the spring, remove the strut top mount and upper perch, swap the spring, and reinstall in the reverse order. http://vorshlag.smugmug.com/Instruct...DSC_6050-S.jpg http://vorshlag.smugmug.com/Instruct...DSC_0963-S.jpg Of course, if you are going to all of that effort to swap the springs, it is zero extra effort to swap in some Vorshlag camber plates, hehe. :) But if you have no intentions of ever doing any autocross, track driving or canyon carving, then you don't "need" more negative camber or positive caster adjustment. http://vorshlag.smugmug.com/Vorshlag...smallerGif.gif One thing that always trips people up when they slap on lowering springs: if you keep the same OEM length struts, the amount that you are lowering the car with the new springs is the same amount that you will lose in suspension bump travel. So, let's say you have 2" of bump travel stock, and you lower the car 1.5"... how much will the suspension have to move under compression before you are slamming into the bump stops? Answer = 1/2". THAT is why most "lowered car" ride so poorly - the struts are not shortened to accommodate this loss of bump travel. But who is going to make shorter than stock struts that are made for an OEM spring? (answer - one company, shown below) For a properly designed coilover strut made to run at lower ride heights we always shorten the strut body considerably, to compensate. This will lose "total suspension stroke" but often gain inches of bump travel over the standard "lowering spring on stock struts" kind of install. http://vorshlag.smugmug.com/Product-..._DSC8420-S.jpg http://vorshlag.smugmug.com/Vorshlag...8%20copy-S.jpg But good coilvoers cost from $2500-3000 and up for these cars (and by good I mean "Not Chinese", not KW, and not twin tubes). So we came up with an alternative for lowering Mustangs without busting the bank... a Bilstein inverted monotube strut that is 1.25" shorter than stock length S197 struts. We couple these with our camber plates and several lowering spring choices, build it all into a strut assembly ready to install, then sell it for $1499. It is very popular because... it gains back that 1.25" in compression travel when lowered. And you don't re-use anything from the old strut/spring/upper mount assembly, so the install takes half the time and you don't need a spring compressor. Not trying to sell you on something, more of a warning of what will likely happen when you lower the car using the same stock length struts. This issue happens with OEM, Konis, Tokicos, and just about anything else made to use the OEM style springs, other than the Bilstein monotube shown above. If the ride doesn't matter to you, and crashing around on the bump stops is not a worry, then feel free to ignore all of this. We tend to hear from customers who have already "Been there, done that" with the lower spring only solutions and are finally looking for better ride quality, more performance, AND the lowered ride height. It can be done if you know what to get... Cheers, |
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