|
-
Strut tower bar installation
Hello!
Is there a proper way of installing adjustable strut tower bars.
I found this on Tanabe website:
Adjustable Preload
A very common error when installing tower bars, It is always recommended to raise the vehicle when installing so that the load of the shock uppermounts on the shock towers is relieved and balanced out. When raised, and the tower bar is placed onto the vehicle, the preload can be adjusted and set. After it is bolted on and the car is lowered, each shock tower will have equal load and will prevent independent movements of each shock. This will provide an extremely noticeable difference after installing. If a tower bar is installed on a car that is not raised, great benefits will be missed.
Thoughts and suggestions guys?? thanks!
-
There seems to be two schools of thought re: strut bars.
1. The bar is a static brace, so should be installed with wheels on the ground.
2. The bar is a stressed brace, so should have some pre-tension dialed in by installing it with some load off the towers.
I have no clue which one is the 'right' way, but I did dial mine in with a few mm's worth of pre-load in it. Interested to see where this goes.
It's not a f*cking Prelude.
-
INteresting...i heard it was meant to be installed neutrally, with no preloading..
I MISS VTEC.... BOOST is OVERATED lol
-
i agree with the tanabe website.
the purpose of the bar is to improve rigidity, so you'd want to install it neutral, and then have load put on it...
if you install it with load already on. then what benefits can be gained? all you wouldve done is tighten the imbalance.
-
i did mine at benjammins place, he told me to place the part that connects to the top of ur tower...i dunno what its called...but it looks like this...

then connect the brace onto both sides...

then tighten the bar...
all was done whilst the car was on the ground with load...
 Originally Posted by aaronng
SOHC VTEC = great fuel consumption!
DOHC VTEC = what fuel consumptioBAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!
"A religious war is like children fighting over who has the strongest imaginary friend"
-
make sure you guys tighten it up every 3 months. lol can become lose eventually.
i put load on them because its flat against the body of the car anyway so i thought it would not make a difference
-
imo raise teh front, take load off the front struts
ut on brace and preload it
lower front
= tightly braced struts
to see all of my build, checkout
-
More Views and opinions from someone with heaps of car knowledge, or proven physics behind there reasoning please !! =D
I MISS VTEC.... BOOST is OVERATED lol
-
fcuk trism your picture made me scared of my cat.
anyway gonna try no loading them today. see what it do
-
it makes sense for no preload installation.
good question TIMIZKOOL
-
That tower brace in those photos looks to be a truly excellent brace. It's obvious that any flex in the bracing tube results in poor tower brace performance, but equally any flex in the tower brackets also results in poor brace performance, no matter how rigid the bracing tube itself may be.
Note how rigidly constructed those tower brackets are, I can't see them flexing to any significant degree, so performance should be very good. For reference, have a look at the brackets on typical Ebay style tower braces, much less robust...
I think the rod ends are nice (both look good and good engineering practice), but in reality are overkill. Note that an articulation at this point(s) doesn't affect brace rigidity, because the brace doesn't work by providing vertical stiffness (doesn't and can't, unless it looked like a bridge girder), only lateral stiffness in compression and tension.
I'm not sure how much real difference pre-loading or not pre-loading will make, but it's probably not much (?). I could be wrong, but it should be easy to test it in real life just by back to back testing with pre-loading and no pre-loading in the brace.
Last edited by JohnL; 30-08-2008 at 01:15 PM.
-
 Originally Posted by JohnL
I'm not sure how much real difference pre-loading or not pre-loading will make, but it's probably not much (?). I could be wrong, but it should be easy to test it in real life just by back to back testing with pre-loading and no pre-loading in the brace.
I can tell you that too much pre-load will mess up your suspension geometry, to the point that one of my previous cars would understeer through every roundabout if there was even a whiff of moisture on the road.
I've heard a lot of different theories about strut bars - one person even went so far as to tell me to drill out the threads in the bar, so that each end link will become 'truly adjustable'. It kind of makes sense, and kind of doesn't 
I'll try a neutral installation one of these days and see if I can tell the difference.
It's not a f*cking Prelude.
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
Bookmarks