Paul Smith
Members
Afternoon all,
After selling the Accord Type R, and 3 weeks into my ownership of a 2004 Type S, I had to sort out the suspension.
I bought the car from a good friend of mine after three Type S Accord's came into his showroom.
The Type R was still in my possession when I first bought the Type S so it remained at the showroom until my Type R was transported to its new home. In that time I had a full set of discs and pads fitted and I opted for a set of AP Lowering springs.
http://www.dcperformance.co.uk/cheap/349861/honda/ap-lowering-springs/fs50-001.html
Eibachs would have taken 3 weeks to arrive. The AP's arrived in less than a week and I therefore incurred no labour charges for fitting . . . . bonus
On picking the car up it appeared that the springs had been fitted the wrong way around as the rear wheels were literally in the arches. Now I am no stranger to modifying cars but it did not look as if the theory off “the front will take time to settle" applied here. I never saw the springs but from what I was told, it would have been impossible to do so. Reason being that the diameter of the coil on the rear springs would not sit on top of the retaining plate on the front damper.
Anyway, one week in and the front shock gave in and was leaking all over my lovely painted garage floor.
So, back on the phone to DC Performance to get a set of KONI dampers.
http://www.dcperformance.co.uk/cheap/74094/honda/koni-sport-front-dampers/8041-1322lsport.html
No point on doing things by half, so I paid for all four.
http://www.dcperformance.co.uk/cheap/72153/honda/koni-sport-rear-dampers/8041-1329sport.html
Had them fitted at the weekend and it was immediately obvious that the revised dampers have raised the car, by quite a bit it appears. The spring itself sits higher in the damper compared to the standard dampers and I fear that there isn't much I can do about it. The rear dampers are adjustable (they have to be physically removed) but the front only adjust for damping, not height.
Has anyone else used KONI dampers?
I realise that this thread is useless without pictures so I will take the SLR down to the garage tonight and take a few shots for you to see.
After selling the Accord Type R, and 3 weeks into my ownership of a 2004 Type S, I had to sort out the suspension.
I bought the car from a good friend of mine after three Type S Accord's came into his showroom.
The Type R was still in my possession when I first bought the Type S so it remained at the showroom until my Type R was transported to its new home. In that time I had a full set of discs and pads fitted and I opted for a set of AP Lowering springs.
http://www.dcperformance.co.uk/cheap/349861/honda/ap-lowering-springs/fs50-001.html
Eibachs would have taken 3 weeks to arrive. The AP's arrived in less than a week and I therefore incurred no labour charges for fitting . . . . bonus
On picking the car up it appeared that the springs had been fitted the wrong way around as the rear wheels were literally in the arches. Now I am no stranger to modifying cars but it did not look as if the theory off “the front will take time to settle" applied here. I never saw the springs but from what I was told, it would have been impossible to do so. Reason being that the diameter of the coil on the rear springs would not sit on top of the retaining plate on the front damper.
Anyway, one week in and the front shock gave in and was leaking all over my lovely painted garage floor.
So, back on the phone to DC Performance to get a set of KONI dampers.
http://www.dcperformance.co.uk/cheap/74094/honda/koni-sport-front-dampers/8041-1322lsport.html
No point on doing things by half, so I paid for all four.
http://www.dcperformance.co.uk/cheap/72153/honda/koni-sport-rear-dampers/8041-1329sport.html
Had them fitted at the weekend and it was immediately obvious that the revised dampers have raised the car, by quite a bit it appears. The spring itself sits higher in the damper compared to the standard dampers and I fear that there isn't much I can do about it. The rear dampers are adjustable (they have to be physically removed) but the front only adjust for damping, not height.
Has anyone else used KONI dampers?
I realise that this thread is useless without pictures so I will take the SLR down to the garage tonight and take a few shots for you to see.