Jason Tower wrote:
this is the recipe i use when dialing in adjustable suspension:
1. disconnect front and rear swaybars if they have adjustable endlinks (only one side needs to be disconnected)
2. ballast the driver seat with your body weight and fill gas tank halfway. if you sometimes carry a passenger put about 100# in the passenger seat to give a reasonable compromise.
3. adjust the spring perches to set ride height/rake where you want it making sure left and right sides are similar. it helps to verify that camber/toe are reasonably close to desired final values.
4. using scales adjust the perches to get your cross weight 50/50, making changes such that it minimizes ride height changes. you can change the cross weight by adjusting any of the four corners. for example if the LF/RR weight is too high lower their perches a tad and raise the RF/LR perches an equal amount, that will keep ride height/rake/side-to-side more or less unchanged.
5. recheck ride height, tweak slightly if necessary. if you were careful in step 4 it should require minimal adjustment.
6. if you made changes in step 5 recheck corner weight, it should require only minor adjustments at this point
7. set camber
8. set toe
9. hook up sway bars if necessary, adjusting the endlink lengths so there is no preload
remember to bounce the car several times to "settle" it back to normal height every time it's jacked up, and it should be rolled back and forth a bit as well, especially when setting camber/toe.
Or you can do it like the lemons car with ebay coilovers.
1. Drop car onto scales
2. Observe 52% crossweight and ride height "about right"
3. "Shit yeah!" Crack open a beer.
_________________
Mike Whitney
whit32@gmail.com, 919-454-5445
V10, V8, V8t, I6, I6, V6, F4t, I4, I4, I4, I4, I2, 1, 1