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syx_ek
29-03-2009, 04:11 AM
Hey guys

I did a search and no luck in finding out a few answers to my questions, currently im looking to set up my ek for twistys however not quiet looking to go the full 9 yards as of yet, could i get some advise in what i need to get done for my ek to get it started for twistys, im not quiet looking at getting coil overs as of yet, looking at getting really stiff suspension for the moment i already have ek9 ctr front and rear sway bars? could anyone "suggest" a decent set up just to get me started, please guys only "suggestions" no need to post your actual set up, for obvious reasons.

oh and also - any suggestions on building your own coil overs or even a spring and shock set up from previous experience that has worked for touge driving.

- Thanks in advance

SHOGUNOVDDRK
29-03-2009, 06:51 AM
TLC do not accept applications from FWD cars....Ok Maybe a Mazda 2. GG.

turtleEK1
29-03-2009, 08:39 AM
If you want a decent setup... your better of going coilovers from the start. You will have good height and damper adjustability.

For a decent starting set up: Coilovers, sways bars front and rear, strut braces, and alignment and some good tyres on some 15inch wheels. Possibly look into reducing the weight of the vehicle too.

Will this car still be your daily?

bennjamin
29-03-2009, 09:03 AM
touge ? Thats in Japan and parts of Asia. Not NSW where you are from.
Why do you want a car to reflect what you have seen on Best motoring ? when Here in Oz we have no such roads.

DreadAngel
29-03-2009, 10:59 AM
Gunsai Touge in NSW Chuck, check the map =P

i_own_you
29-03-2009, 11:35 AM
or OP. :P

syx_ek
29-03-2009, 11:56 AM
ok sorry let me re phrase - twisty kind of roads in nsw (op for example) not touge in japan where i dont live, besides it doesnt matter where i live, im asking about setup examples in this case and also has anyone built there own suspension for this sort of application.

DreadAngel
29-03-2009, 01:05 PM
Yeah, stiff suspension and lots of bumps, potholes and undulating tarmac go really well together XD

If you want to get a decent suspension, its not just get coilovers with height and damper adjustments and thats it. You should check out things such as the coilover's design if its Twin-Tube or Monotube (Most JDM Coilovers are Twin-Tube not Monotube) also check things such as valving (In a lot of cases, JDM Shock valving are inadequate or not matched that well). Thats suspension alone... Then you have to figure ways to overcome things like bump steer etc...

Others can give you more on this...

d15z1SUX
29-03-2009, 02:29 PM
tein super streets maybe... as the spring rate isnt too stiff apparently?

DreadAngel
29-03-2009, 02:53 PM
You want your car to be more sensitive and respond to your inputs but you also need it to be compliant and controlable over bumps/broken surface which you encounter often on the twisties... Just Spring rating alone isn't enough, you need to test it out to see if it can compensate for the bumps while still responding to your steering demands at speed =)

So no point going for something that is stiff as hell and made worse by inadequate valving for the surface all for the point of "better handling" when you're just going to hit about 5 bumps in a matter of 1 second and fly off the course in some random direction XD

vtecing
30-03-2010, 12:06 PM
i am also looking for a good suspension set up for twisty mountain driving. Ive had coilovers in my n14 with 8 & 6kg spring rates and i found them way too harsh / unsafe for twisty street driving. I am looking towards a good spring ans shock combo but im worried about finding springs and shocks that will compliment each other and I am also worried that they will either sit too high or too low with no adjustability. The dcr2 susspension is PERFECT, but I would like something lower for the eg hatch

bennjamin
30-03-2010, 12:39 PM
Twisty roads ? Standard or slightly stiffer springs and decent shocks plus uprated rear swaybar. You don't want superstiff coilovers or springs bouncing you around

Riviera
30-03-2010, 01:22 PM
Spring and shock combo most definatly for bumpy twisty roads... ive noticed from personal experience bumps on corners with my coilovers dont go well ive never lost control of my vehicle
but just standard driving cause the front to travel till it found the road again... Then be worried about the rear kicking out...

Pedders spring and shock setup would most likely be the go man they lower your car and theyre
built for those bumpy conditions... The popo's use pedders in the pursuit cars...

saikou27
30-03-2010, 01:30 PM
i agree with the pedders option for a daily and a road car. ur other option would be king springs coupled kyb agx or something like that. that and some decent swaybars will be good

rayb3na_
30-03-2010, 02:10 PM
koni yellows with eibach springs and proven effective :) other option could be some bilstein shocks? the possibilities are endless.. if you get serious about stuff like that time to upgrade all your old rubber bushings in your car!

nigs
30-03-2010, 05:21 PM
drive the car till you exceed it's limits.

string
30-03-2010, 06:56 PM
1) Your bushings need to be good. Any cracked bushings and you're wasting your time.
2) Your shocks need to work - if they're cheap, they're probably crap.
3) You need to get the rear roll stiffness up there - rear swaybar is a start.
4) Best tyres you can afford.
5) Don't bother with monkey bars, spend your money on shocks instead.

With basic lowering springs, quality dialed in shocks, big rear swaybar and great tyres, your car will be better than your are for a good while.

chargeR
30-03-2010, 08:16 PM
1) Your bushings need to be good. Any cracked bushings and you're wasting your time.
2) Your shocks need to work - if they're cheap, they're probably crap.
3) You need to get the rear roll stiffness up there - rear swaybar is a start.
4) Best tyres you can afford.
5) Don't bother with monkey bars, spend your money on shocks instead.

With basic lowering springs, quality dialed in shocks, big rear swaybar and great tyres, your car will be better than your are for a good while.

This guy sums it up pretty well, you need to get the roll stiffness up without going to excessive spring rates. I will add that whilst these things will make your car more enjoyable to drive on a winding road you shouldn't be aiming to be faster on such roads because invariably the fastest person is the most foolish and the most willing to risk lives.

Limbo
30-03-2010, 10:03 PM
If your not going coilovers, then KYB AGX with springs to match your height or Koni yellow or Bilstein

Personally, good coilovers, are actually the way to go, i think you just had a bad experience

jeffreymui
30-03-2010, 10:11 PM
make sure u lower ur tyre pressure, or else GG on a sharp turn when u gun it with stiff suspension

chargeR
30-03-2010, 10:26 PM
make sure u lower ur tyre pressure, or else GG on a sharp turn when u gun it with stiff suspension

Make sure you don't listen to this guy.

jeffreymui
30-03-2010, 10:46 PM
i wonder if rims size actually affect the handling in this situation?

chargeR
30-03-2010, 11:38 PM
i wonder if rims size actually affect the handling in this situation?

Yes they do. Wheel dimensions affect handling in all situations. Every time you make a change to wheel offset, wheel diameter, wheel width, tyre width, tyre profile, tyre construction it has an effect on handling. The extent of that effect varies.

89lude
01-04-2010, 10:20 PM
Yes they do. Wheel dimensions affect handling in all situations. Every time you make a change to wheel offset, wheel diameter, wheel width, tyre width, tyre profile, tyre construction it has an effect on handling. The extent of that effect varies.

What would be the effects of offset on handling?

vtecing
01-04-2010, 11:03 PM
offset obviously increases or decreases track (how far appart the wheels are from the left and right hand side of the car) usually increased track is good in most circumstances but if it becomes too wide, the car wont be as nimble.

similar principal applies for wheel base front and rear

chargeR
02-04-2010, 08:16 AM
What would be the effects of offset on handling?

Here are a few things off the top of my head.

Offset affects the scrub radius, with a more negative offset giving a more positive scrub radius and a more positive offset giving a more negative scrub radius. A positive scrub radius will have more steering kickback and less steering effort at low speed, whereas a negative or zero scrub radius will have high steering effort at low speed but the steering will tend to wander less because the tyre exerts a smaller moment on the steering axis. This will have a significant effect on feel through the steering wheel when on the limit of the tyre's grip.

Offset also changes the motion ratio ever so slightly in some suspensions which makes the spring/damper effectively slightly softer or harder depending on whether you are increasing or decreasing offset. Offset also affects the location of the roll centre very slightly since the centre of the contact patch which is part of the geometry which defines the roll centre is changed. This affects roll effects in a corner but I don't full understand how, but I don't think anything less than a 2" change in wheel offset would have a measurable effect.

chargeR
02-04-2010, 07:56 PM
In addition to what I posted above the wheel offset affects the track (distance between the centrelines of the wheels) which will change the amount of load transferred across the chassis to the outside tyre from the inside. Think of it like this, a cornering force produces a roll moment in the car because the lateral force at the tyre is offset from the centre of gravity (CG). Somewhat like a seesaw but in a vertical situation, the tyres push on one end and the mass of the car pushes on the other end. The CG is trying to push its way to the outside of the corner because an object in motion likes to stay in the direction it is going. It is the lateral force at the tyres that forces the car to go in an arc.

Since the lateral force at the tyre is at ground level and the CG is higher up the car tries to rotate or roll (about the roll centre but that is not pertinent to this point). This rotation must be resisted by a vertical force at the outside tyre and the further the outside tyre is from the CG the less significant this force needs to be and hence the less heavily the outer tyre is loaded. So for example in an ideal situation a car with X track (where X is a given constant) will have an outer tyre twice as heavily loaded as a car with 2X track assuming they are in a steady state corner of the same lateral Gs and both cars have the same mass.

If this isn't clear I can draw a picture and scan it.

The way this affects handling is roughly like this: A tyre develop increasing levels of grip as they are loaded vertically, EG. a heavier car car has more grip (friction between the tyres footprint and the road surface) on the same tyres. However an twice the vertical load (weight) on a tyre doesn't give you twice the grip. There is a diminishing return, so if a tyre is initially loaded vertically by say Y Newtons and gives X Newtons amount of peak lateral grip before it breaks away that same tyre when loaded twice as much to 2Y Newtons might only give 1.7X Newtons of peak lateral grip before it lets go.

So if you have less load transferred from the inner tyre to the outer tyre you have more total grip at that pair of tyres. Another way of thinking of it is that your car will never generate as much grip as it does when it is parked :). So vertical load transfer to the outer tyre is to be avoided, and a wider track brought about by lower wheel offset is one way to achieve this. The amounts of offset that are usually discussed here though may not be significant enough to produce a noticeable change in lateral grip available, the effects could be masked by a myriad of other factors. Also aiming for optimum peak lateral grip is only one consideration in setting up a race car, although a fairly significant one.

Sorry for the long rambling/offtopic post but I remember seeing a post regarding wheel offsets and their effect on handling and intended to put together some good thoughts on it and post but never got round to it.

If anything isn't clear in this post then let me know and I will try to clarify.

89lude
04-04-2010, 02:18 PM
Wow thats exactly what i was looking for when i posted my thread askign that question! But yeah the concept is crystal clear now. So i would assume that since the effects of offset takes place between a pair of wheels - means that if i have a set of wheels with a higher offset for the rears in comparison to the fronts, that only taking this one factor into account (since the front has a wider track) i would have a marginally grippier front end?

chargeR
04-04-2010, 09:32 PM
Wow thats exactly what i was looking for when i posted my thread askign that question! But yeah the concept is crystal clear now. So i would assume that since the effects of offset takes place between a pair of wheels - means that if i have a set of wheels with a higher offset for the rears in comparison to the fronts, that only taking this one factor into account (since the front has a wider track) i would have a marginally grippier front end?

Yeah you're right but my post above really only considers one pair of tyres. Once you start considering a full four wheeled car things start to get a bit more complex as you have to consider how the front and rear suspension, and particularly the roll stiffness, will interact.

Say for example that the desired effect is less understeer/more front grip so you put some 25mm spacers on the front end it is possible that this will increase the front roll stiffness, so whilst you would expect more grip from that end of the car since there is less load transfer to the outer tyre due to the wider track, that effect might be slightly mitigated by the front roll stiffness increasing relative to the rear. If you then consider that when the front and rear roll stiffnesses of a car interact generally the stiffer end loses grip first due to overloading the tyres, so it would seem that the change to a wider track has effects that could produce both understeer and oversteer. Most likely the positive effect of the change will be more significant than any understeer due to higher front roll stiffness and the net effect will be a grippier front end.

For some anecdotal evidence I run anywhere between 10-15mm lower offsets and 1" wider wheels at the front on my DC5 and it still understeers more than it did previously when I ran very worn semis on the rear and passable ones on the front. So wheel offset is just one tuning tool and it probably isn't nearly as significant as spring or swaybar rates.

HERE (http://www.honda-tech.com/showthread.php?t=2746097) is the thread on honda-tech that got me thinking about it. Take anything meb58 says with a massive grain of salt but I think beanbag is on the right track. The guys on the RR/AutoX section on Honda-tech seem to have forgotten more about this than I will ever know so it is a good place to start reading.

integragsi96
13-04-2010, 09:38 AM
touge ? Thats in Japan and parts of Asia. Not NSW where you are from.
Why do you want a car to reflect what you have seen on Best motoring ? when Here in Oz we have no such roads.

how about the putty road....thats pretty twisty

EK1.6LCIV
13-04-2010, 11:55 AM
nsw has some nice roads leading from the west to the blue mountains, Manly is also a good drive as well as the drive to Kiama, yeh haa :)



If you want a decent setup... your better of going coilovers from the start. You will have good height and damper adjustability.

For a decent starting set up: Coilovers, sways bars front and rear, strut braces, and alignment and some good tyres on some 15inch wheels. Possibly look into reducing the weight of the vehicle too.

Will this car still be your daily?

and what Nigs mentioned also is a great point :)


spend money on bushes (if your car is beyond 160,000ks on stock ones time to upgrade :))
*check for wear in tie rods/rack ends as well (will make a world of difference to your steering and alignment if these are in good condition)

*decent dampener/spring combo (alot of good kits from Koni with springs included to suit most vehicles with a moderate drop in height (mine was nearly 30mm in height over stock), but the abilty to tweak the dampening makes the ride alot better)
*rear trailing arm bushes
*front and rear strut braces
*rear sway bar (ek4/em1) or ek9 with asr kit (if it's an ek civic anyhow) any is better than none, best per $ mod around
*15x6.5" 38 offset, they don't rub scrub or anything but work well for how you want to drive on a surface that's not perfect
*single direction tyres (tried a good dozen on my car most manufactures as long as theyre good in the rain will suit your daily needs)