Originally posted by aggie97
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Coil-over spring rates
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Originally posted by dville_gt View PostThen why does the front suspension not compress or rebound at all. Even the m3 suspension on my bmw will compress when i push on the fender and i'd assume it is way tighter then this suspension."If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford
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Originally posted by Grape View Postthen it is a mile from being coil bound.
Only other thing I can think of is that you have SN95/99 struts on the front of a fox which will bottom the strut as they are longer than the fox struts.....
I might be onto something with that one.
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Originally posted by aggie97 View Postyup...there is something else either hitting the ground or binding up. Look at the control arms and sway bar links and see if they are hitting something. Other option is to jack the fugger up and drop it hard off the jack and see if it compresses or makes a thud. Kidding.
Only other thing I can think of is that you have SN95/99 struts on the front of a fox which will bottom the strut as they are longer than the fox struts.....
I might be onto something with that one.
S6001EM - 87-93 Mustang (V8 only)
You can see in the picture that there is tube still coming out of the strut housing.
I don't have a sway bar on the front and the control arms move pretty much effortlessly when the strut is not attached..
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Originally posted by dville_gt View PostThese are the ones I am running:
S6001EM - 87-93 Mustang (V8 only)
You can see in the picture that there is tube still coming out of the strut housing.
I don't have a sway bar on the front and the control arms move pretty much effortlessly when the strut is not attached..
Anyway, just offering up ideas that may or may not help.
Good luck!
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dville,
It sounds like you have eliminated all of the things that could cause it to bind, and if the spring is not coil bound, then installing a stiffer spring probably won't help, but ought to make things worse in that regard.
Your original post says that the suspension is stiff when you push down on the fender, or when you pull up on it.
One things that is not yet mentioned - Perhaps the strut compression and rebound settings are both set to full stiff? If this is the case, you would be able to cycle the strut at slow shaft speed (as you have been doing when checking for binding), but when the car hits a bump or launches, the front end won't bump or rebound because of the stiff shock setting.
From the picture of the spring, it appears that you still have several inches of travel left in the spring before it coil binds. If the spring is coil binding, you should see where the paint is rubbed off between the coils. The tape trick that Grape mentions is a good one.
As for the wear on your strut - as others have stated, a stiffer spring would probably help with that. Assuming that your current springs have a 150lb. rate, the 12" 225lb. spring will probably put the spanner nut close to the same spot on the strut tube.
Hope this helps - good luck,
Tom
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Originally posted by aggie97 View Posta strut piston can bottom out internally on a bumpstop and still have shaft visible.....that sounded strangely sexual...? Anyway, pull the spring, check travel. pull the strut check travel. You obviously have some miles on the shocks so they worked once....what changed? Does the car sit lower? Did it bottom out before? with that Lump in the engine bay and 175's you should just about be able to sit on the fender and bottom the car on the ground. are the shocks adjustable? put them on soft or any other setting and see if there is a change.
Anyway, just offering up ideas that may or may not help.
Good luck!
Appreciate everyones help.
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Make sure that you have that sleeve/spacer on the top of the cone at the top of the strut. A lot of people just zip the nut down with an impact and don't pay attention to that spacer. Most of the time it will NOT go down inside of the heim bearing in the CC plate without some devine intervention.
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