Skipping out of this weekend's double header RallyX. As work is getting busier, I figured my car-time was better spent in the garage this time around.
Step 1: Polish your helmet... not a euphemism, it was filthy and a good indication of how much dirt is in the car during runs:
Next I pulled the rear suspension. Apparently, the dust boots I jammed in there just kept the dust in, we'll have to see how long the shocks last. I may post a learn me dust mitigation for suspension, because this doesn't work.
The lathe is down at my work's MakerSpace, so I looked to see if I could fit the longer 10" 225lb springs with the shorter spring perches. It's a bit close to the bottom for comfort, but I think it'll work if I keep an eye on it.
Then I went back to the front suspension, I needed to mock up the front shocks, and start to get some notional travel measurements to plug into the spreadsheet to figure out spring rate and length that'll work with my car. The first thing was to figure out how to mount just the free shock onto the hub. I did the S-Chassis thing, and grabbed a handful of zipties... then spent the next few moments respecting the job a McPherson strut has to do! even with the hub tied to the strut, it still wanted to rotate in caster quite a bit.
I rigged up the same system as I did with the back , put a long bolt in the brake disc, rig up a ruler next to it, and run the shock through it's travel.
So we're looking at around 7.5" of travel, which is a tad more than the off the shelf options. I threw a tape on there to figure out what length of spring I can jam in there at droop. I also checked the rest of the suspension at that full deflection, and it's almost prefect. There's no binding, and lower control arm is just about parallel, meaning I've got camber gain through the whole sweep, and no weird bumpsteer characteristics.
I want to make sure to keep some distance for the shock ears, and that offset was looking like 25mm or so it's looking like after the math something in the range of a 250lb in 12 or 14" length might be ideal.
One last check while I've got it all mocked up: I wanted to make sure the camber wasn't stupid at ride height, here's it at 1/3rd compression and full compression:
So 1* static, and 4* at full compression sounds about perfect!
The last piece of the puzzle is how to make the ears. The new strut tubes measure out at a diameter 52mm. The drifty coilovers measure down at 47mm, but these S14 KYB's are really close.
They're only welded on the bottom , so it should be easy to grind that weld off, slide the ears off the tube. Then put a small relief cut on the back, and fit them over the new strut tube, hit everything with hammers and a lot, apply terrible welding, and I might have myself a real front suspension!