Blaise said:
Trackmouse said:
In reply to Blaise :
Because when you lower it, the threaded body goes up, and that, eventually, takes up room where the shock shaft operates. 9 out of 10 times it occurs when some kid wants that slammed look, and then nails pot holes and complains that his dumped Miata broke down at Walmart.
You're referring to just moving your static height to have no bump travel left.
I'm asking why the total travel would be reduced.
Because of packaging. An adjustable body shock consists of a generic shock cartridge with an adapter screwed on the end. The adapter takes up space, so the shock cartridge is limited to how long it can be. On a non-adjusable shock with a one-piece body, the entire length of the body can be used to package the shock shaft.
If you're running at minimum ride height, the difference is minor. If you're running above that, the difference becomes more and more dramatic.
Note that shaft travel does not change depending on how you adjust a two-piece shock, unlike what Travelmouse said. The screwed-on adapter is not changing the actual internal volume of the shock cartridge, it's simply stuck on the end.
Pictures! Here's a cross section of an adjustable body shock and a single piece shock at a given minimum height. You can see there's a bit of a difference in the amount of room available to package a shaft.
And if we run at longer than minimum (say, because the minimum length causes the suspension to bind up), it gets more dramatic. Look at how much longer the shaft can be in a fixed body shock.
An intelligently designed single-piece shock will always allow for as much bump travel as the suspension can legitimately offer, and maximum shaft travel given that constraint - or as much shaft travel as the suspension can offer in droop. A two-piece shock will be (hopefully) be designed to allow for maximum bump, which makes it only a little bit worse than a single piece shock - it's just heavier with a bit less travel available. If the two-piece setup is designed for a minimum length that is shorter than the car can actually handle, it will really suffer.
Again, this is only an issue in situations where you're travel limited. Some applications have loads of room for the shock shaft - for example, there's 2.5" of unused potential shaft travel in the front shocks of an NC. But in the rear of almost every Miata, you need as much shaft as you can package in the shock. For example, the rear of the ND comes with over 7" of shaft travel from the factory. I've seen aftermarket two-piece coilover setups from major companies that use springs that are only 5" long - that's not the range of motion of the spring, that's the free length. Obviously they're only using half the travel the factory ever did, which has a massive effect on handling and ride.
You'll notice that neither Flyin' Miata nor 949 Racing offer two-piece shocks at any price point. Both of those companies take suspension very seriously.
This is a really poorly understood thing, and there are some suspension manufacturers who aggressively market bad information. Next time, we'll talk about how preload is not a thing outside of edge cases