Quote:
Originally Posted by CraigS
Don think back to a bone stock 69 Camaro. Did it ride OK? So what has changed? To me overall suspension design can get into a lot of stuff w/ roll centers, instant centers, etc. But ride is much reduced from overall design. You need 5-6 inches of wheel travel w/o anything hitting anything else, no control arm bushings binding, no geometric binding (an old Fox Mustang rear suspension would not roll if all bushings were replaced w/ spherical bearings), and reasonable shock and spring rates. The OP says his shocks are in the middle of their travel so that is good. I'd next disconnect, or remove if necessary, the coilovers to see if the suspension will move up and down w/o them. Next I think he also said the shocks are on #6 adjustment. Why? I don't know the specifics of those shocks but I have never seen any that #6 is the softest setting. Usually 0 or 1 is softest so that needs to be tried to see how it affects ride. And I may have missed it, but I haven't seen a spring rate # yet so we have no idea what he has. Based on your experience one other possibility is the shocks are completely wrong for the car. An adjustable shock has a range of stiffnesses available. The softest setting on these shocks could possibly be too stiff for this application. I once had the compression damping made softer in a pair of QA1 DA coilovers because it was too stiff for a good ride in a cobra replica. I figured that QA1 probably valved them more for something like a Camaro which would be 6-700# heavier.
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Craig, you obviously know more than I do about suspension. I can only recount my experience and reiterate that I had the president of Ridetech drive my car.
One comment though. Ridetech monotube shocks are not compression adjustable. Only rebound is adjustable because that is generally a limitation of monotube shocks, they can’t be made double adjustable without remote reservoirs. So with a Ridetech setup only rebound is adjustable. Brett from Ridetech told me that compression adjustment doesn’t do anything anyway because the spring rates are so high. The rebound adjustment is essentially used to dampen the rebound due to all the stored energy in those high preload, high spring rate springs imho. If the damping is too low I think it can lead to the loud bang that happens when driving over a drop in the road surface at speed. Note that the Ridetech ride is fine on smooth roads. It’s these discontinuities in the pavement that generate the harshness.
The other thing I will reiterate is take a look at the Roadster Shop Ride Line chassis. They have incorporated a lot of the improvements that I have been whining about for years.
So apparently I’m not the only one thinking this way.
Don