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Koni FSD on 335is
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03-05-2018, 11:44 PM | #23 | |
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Mine now have 20k+ miles on them and they remain stellar matched with Eibach Pro springs. More here
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03-06-2018, 02:36 PM | #24 |
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03-06-2018, 07:23 PM | #25 |
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Stiff does not equate with better. My fastest times at Daytona, high 1:53's, have been in very compliant cars. It's not about stiff, it's about contact patch.
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03-06-2018, 07:49 PM | #26 |
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Perhaps. That's the magic of the adjustable shock. You can move it from soft to ultra stiff. Your choice
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03-07-2018, 08:55 AM | #27 |
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For stiff suspension you need stickier tires. If your tires can provide sufficient mechanical grip you are better off with softer suspension.
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03-07-2018, 01:33 PM | #28 | |
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The Sport springs' spring rate (145/460) is very similar to the Eibach Pro Kit (148/456) so the FSDs should be a good match? Which bumpstops are you running? Spring rates: http://www.e90post.com/forums/showthread.php?t=235797 |
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03-07-2018, 03:13 PM | #29 | ||
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Both DFV and FSD were developed to address this issue without needing to spend $8000+ on dampers, and require complex setup by the end user. Did it succeed? Well, I would say Ohlins did a better job than Koni, but they had different objectives, and price points. For the target application the FSD's are very good with the right springs, and I would argue they need more rate than your OE or even sport springs deliver. As for the other comment, you can't just slap sticky tires on an over damped and under sprung car and get better performance. In fact, I would ask; sticky by what measure? My Michelin Cup N1 and N2 slicks are harder compound than any street car will ever see or need. Hell, sidewall stiffness is a bigger factor than "stickiness." So are bump stops and how you tune them for initial engagement. With a street car these factors can be all over the map depending on what tyres you chose. Tyre pressure is also a MAJOR factor. My experience on track is too stiff is usually an indication of an over damped and under sprung car. On so many street cars I've driven that's paired with oversized swaybars which further complicate and mask the real handling issues. I often dial dampers to full soft and disconnect swaybars to establish a baseline, spring rate being my first consideration when setting up a car. My fastest ever lap at Daytona was in a car damped softer than I'd ever had it before, with slightly higher rate springs than I would have expected, and since then I have always erred towards a under damping and nailing spring rate first and foremost. The tires wore far better, I had more lateral grip, and the corner speeds came right up by more than a couple kph, which was a huge deal. The speeds I was able to carry out of turn 6 and through 10/11 were the highest I'd ever done, which translates into more speed for the next 6000 feet out of T6, and 6800 feet out of T11. If you can carry a couple kph more off the corner in just those two corners you obliterate previous lap times. Stiff as it has been characterized, is not fast.
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03-07-2018, 03:27 PM | #30 | |
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I have the Eibach Pro springs with the FSD's, as does Dan. He's RWD, and I am xDrive. You need bumps set up to engage after about .55-.6" of compression and very progressive engagement. If you put a linear potentiometer on your dampers and measure the travel, you'd be surprised how narrow the range of motion is under normal driving. I've forgotten which I have, but I'd like earlier engagement on the bumps as I have mentioned in the past. Koni makes shims that are 2.5mm thick for tuning bump stop engagement, you can get them from PSI. Don't forget to get yourself longer end links as well. Despite not being noted as a requirement, they make a big difference in the swaybar's initial rate. You want that to be correct.
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Last edited by NiNeTyOne; 03-07-2018 at 03:43 PM.. |
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03-08-2018, 10:22 AM | #31 | |
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Are you running these on some top secret/higher sprung pro-kits that no one else knows about? Also, have any experience with other suspension setups on this platform by chance to compare/contrast? I respect your knowledge/experience with other platforms on the track, but not exactly apples-to-apples when considering the topic of the thread in question. |
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03-08-2018, 10:46 AM | #32 | |
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https://www.caranddriver.com/feature...-a-911-feature You can't tell me that wouldn't provide "better performance" in every conceivable metric on a performance scale; over damped, under sprung, or otherwise. |
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03-08-2018, 11:29 AM | #33 | ||
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03-10-2018, 12:50 PM | #35 | |
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No. If you put them on a dyno, the damping rates are slightly higher than the OE damper, so by using the pro, or the OE springs, they are slightly under sprung.
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03-10-2018, 12:55 PM | #36 | |
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Come down to Daytona and flip any lap time under 1:59 dead and I'll start listening to you rant. Shave off another 5 seconds a lap and you'll be near my average time on a clear track. Maybe then I might actually care about your opinion.
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03-10-2018, 07:36 PM | #38 | |
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anyway, there are a lot more to suspension setup than just spring and damping rate. With a macpherson strut front end like ours, a higher spring rate might reduce the suspension compression on the outer tires, and retain a more favorable camber angle and tire contact size.
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03-13-2018, 12:12 AM | #39 | |
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We could go into all sorts of things from how to shim the bumps to how setup is an evolutionary process where you tweak everything from rake to tire pressures to preload, etc.. How many people are running thermal sensors on the strut bodies so they know when the data they are collecting is valid? See where I'm going here? This is a big subject and a forum isn't the best place to get into it under ideal circumstances. Reality is most people will never do the work to get their chassis tuned, let alone their dampers, and they do stupid s#!t that screws up their setup without ever knowing. Something like an FSD or the Ohlins R&T's (for those willing to do some extra work) are far better for most than a single adjustable monotube design that hasn't changed much since 1959. For 90% of drivers they provide better damping, and a better contact patch under almost all conditions, especially if you haven't gotten the rest of the setup right. That's why FSD's are in my DD and not a set of TTX's. It's a daily.
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03-13-2018, 01:02 AM | #40 | ||
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So I disagree that fsd are the best setup for most people, if that's what you are saying. They seems to be too underdamped(not enough low speed damping) like the stock zsp shocks from all the reports I have been reading since the late 2000s.
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03-15-2018, 03:15 PM | #41 | |
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Ohlins DFV is more of a parallel circuit. 3 paths. Bleed, shim stack or DFV. Shims handle low/medium speed. Piston blowoff handles high speed. DFV handles ultra high speed simultaneously. Take one apart & then look at how they perform on a shock dyno some time, they are very different animals, both in design and in function. Digressive valving in street applications work great IF the streets / pavement are smooth or you are going fast. This can be true even on poor pavement if you are fast. However the ride will deteriorate on poor pavement at slow speeds due to over-damping. The ability to handle both situations is really where the Ohlins R&T's shine, and why I have said previously that they got it right, where Koni missed the mark a bit. Different price points, different objectives. If the R&T were available for xDrive cars they would be on mine, no question. For the daily grocery-getter, the FSD's do a fantastic job. A number of people who have driven my car with this setup and remarked at how composed and stable the car feels, and how predictable it handles when pressed hard. Better still, the car is not upset by expansion joints and pot holes don't send you to the dentist to get your fillings redone. These are very good drivers with lots of track experience, so I'd say that there's growing consensus that if you get the spring/damper/link setup correct with FSD's they can be great for a daily driver that's not going to see track duty. I have also driven cars that have the wrong links and cars that have the correct links on the front bar, and too short of a front link gives the impression of an under damped shock. Short links reduce the initial bar rate. If this was a race car the whole setup would be wildly different, but it's not, it's a daily driver I use in a city that's been a non-stop construction war zone for going on a decade.. Also note that the rear dampers are matched to fairly low rate springs on the OE bushed rear subframe as higher rates are problematic with an overly compliant rear subframe. To do much more in terms of improving the back end, you need to lock down the subframe as they do on the M3 (where they use solid bushings (maybe one of the biggest things you can do to get the car in a state where it can be improved further)). As soon as you do this the rear spring rates jump by 70% (400 vs 686 for rear rates), which means the rear damper valving totally changes. Few people understand how big a factor those rear subframe bushings are and how they factor into suspension dynamics. As soon as you do this you're into all sorts of other costs, because your rear dampers are now not a part of the standard kit you get from Koni/Bilstein/Ohlins, and you're into a total ala carte situation with springs as well. If I lived in a place where the asphalt was billiard table smooth, I'd have chosen differently, but few have that luxury, and some of us are just not THAT motivated for a car that's essentially one step past utilitarian.
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Last edited by NiNeTyOne; 03-16-2018 at 04:23 PM.. |
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03-21-2018, 11:12 AM | #42 | ||
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Glad they work for you
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03-27-2018, 11:30 AM | #44 |
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