Jump to content


shorter springs for my coilovers?


MR 988

Recommended Posts

Dear everyone

Firstly, I would like to wish everyone to have a great new year, best wishes to u and u family.

Dued to my front coilovers have been set at the lowest point, I am thinking to change the shorter springs to lowered more. However, people were not recommended to do that after I took my car to Pedders. They told me that

1. Shocks will be gone very quickly

2. The car will be very very stiff.

So are customised shorter springs really going to have these problems after changed? Could anyone provide some suggestions please?

Many thanks

Eric

Edited by MR 988
Link to comment
Share on other sites


First mistake was asking Pedders for adivce.

Regarding point 2: The shorter spring will need to be slightly stiffer than the old spring to ensure you don't hit the bump stops. The difference won't be that great and you'd hardly notice. Keep in mind that a stiffer spring however won't sag as much under the car's weight.

For example if you currently have a 5kg/mm spring, the car weighs 1200kg (assume 300kg per corner for ease, but it wont be 50/50 in the real world), you have 200mm of spring compression until it binds and you want to go 20mm shorter.

Your current spring will compress: 300kg / 5kg/mm = 60mm

You want it to sit 20mm lower, you can either go to a 170mm long spring at 6kg/mm or keep the 5kg/mm spring and pick a 180mm long spring. I'd go to the heavier spring myself because when you compress the suspension with the same spring rate you'll have 20mm less stroke to absorb the shock; while the heavier spring maybe shorter but because it is a higher spring rate it will be able to absorb more shock before binding/hittign the bump stops. Maths below;

300/5=60mm compression

200-60=140mm remaining travel (assuming the spring binds and doesn't hit the bump stops).

180-60=120mm remaining travel

300/6=50mm compression

170-50=120mm remaining travel

To compress each spring option completly (assuming no coils and wire thickness for ease) from the static height on the car:

200mm 5kg/mm = 1000kg

180mm 5kg/mm = 900kg

170mm 6kg/mm = 1020kg

This is all very simplistic, but were only dealing with a road car wanting to sit 20mm lower, not a race car.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

First mistake was asking Pedders for adivce.

Regarding point 2: The shorter spring will need to be slightly stiffer than the old spring to ensure you don't hit the bump stops. The difference won't be that great and you'd hardly notice. Keep in mind that a stiffer spring however won't sag as much under the car's weight.

For example if you currently have a 5kg/mm spring, the car weighs 1200kg (assume 300kg per corner for ease, but it wont be 50/50 in the real world), you have 200mm of spring compression until it binds and you want to go 20mm shorter.

Your current spring will compress: 300kg / 5kg/mm = 60mm

You want it to sit 20mm lower, you can either go to a 170mm long spring at 6kg/mm or keep the 5kg/mm spring and pick a 180mm long spring. I'd go to the heavier spring myself because when you compress the suspension with the same spring rate you'll have 20mm less stroke to absorb the shock; while the heavier spring maybe shorter but because it is a higher spring rate it will be able to absorb more shock before binding/hittign the bump stops. Maths below;

300/5=60mm compression

200-60=140mm remaining travel (assuming the spring binds and doesn't hit the bump stops).

180-60=120mm remaining travel

300/6=50mm compression

170-50=120mm remaining travel

Thanks Dave for full explaination.

If I am not going to Pedders, are there any good places to go, since different places might not have springs for Pedders?

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Added a bit more on to show the increased spring rate is the better option.

As for where to buy the spring. You can still buy it from pedders, but you just need to know what spring you want. King springs, eibach, tein, cusco, et cetera also do cheap springs. But you need to know what spring rate you want (usually expressed in lb/inch), the inside diameter and the free length.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

To explain more, if you stiff the springs, I have read somewhere else that you can increase the spring by 20% without adjusting the valve in the coilover.. Please do research on this area as well..

If you are in NSW, I can introduce you a shop for you to ask instead of pedders.. I am no expect on this at all.. Superdave is, not me!!!

MR 988, how much lower you want, your car is already hot, and you have to worry the guard inside the wheels as well after you lowered

DSC01161_jpgA.jpg

Edited by ben yip
Link to comment
Share on other sites

To explain more, if you stiff the springs, I have read somewhere else that you can increase the spring by 20% without adjusting the valve in the coilover.. Please do research on this area as well..

If you are in NSW, I can introduce you a shop for you to ask instead of pedders.. I am no expect on this at all.. Superdave is, not me!!!

MR 988, how much lower you want, your car is already hot, and you have to worry the guard inside the wheels as well after you lowered

DSC01161_jpgA.jpg

Thanks very much for both of your suggestions.

Benyip, I only need the 1 finger lowered at the front, could you please introduce the shop for me? Many thx

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rockdale in Sydney

http://www.k-mac.com.au/

They do customised springs. Juvenile and I get my custom sway bar done there.

Talk to Kelvin, the owner. He has my rear sway done few days ago

It is a small shop, but the knowledge they got is expert in the industry

Edited by ben yip
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rockdale in Sydney

http://www.k-mac.com.au/

They do customised springs. Juvenile and I get my custom sway bar done there.

Talk to Kelvin, the owner. He has my rear sway done few days ago

It is a small shop, but the knowledge they got is expert in the industry

Cool, i heared them before. Thanks man, I will talk to him see what he can do.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




  • Join The Club

    Join the Toyota Owners Club and be part of the Community. It's FREE!

  • Latest Postings

    1. 1

      Drive shafts

    2. 0

      FUSE BOXES ALLOCATION - 1996 SUPER CUSTOM Model (Import)

    3. 10

      Vibration through body (not steering wheel) under acceleration

    4. 0

      possible fit 2015 kluger Grnde driver seat on 2019 kluger GX

    5. 0

      front brake calipers

    6. 1

      Drive shafts

    7. 315

      New to Toyota - 2005 Corolla Sportivo!

    8. 10

      Vibration through body (not steering wheel) under acceleration

    9. 0

      P0420 Catalystic converter below Thrushold

    10. 0

      Dashlight dimmer

×
×
  • Create New...

Forums


News


Membership