Try just the sways first. I've had the front sway on for a week. Rear sway on the way. Front sway alone makes comfort mode a little stiffer feeling than stock sport mode. (I don't mind using comfort mode now!) After i get the rear sway on I'll go hit the twisties and see if the wallow is gone. Haven't felt it yet but havent driven hard much yet.I decided to have some fun with mine and went over some bumps in corners and the rear did that dance and I thought, that's gotta go. Now my concern is lowering the car further, as for me it is low enough already. I'm guessing the sways won't take car of that?
Is there another company doing springs for this car that doesn't drop it too much and solves that rear end dance?
Rears were supposed to be on back order until early November but mine just shipped. Arriving Tuesday.Checked their site and the rears are on back order. I'm willing to give those a try first as I like the ride height where it is.
I’m also considering Eibach front & rear sway bar upgrade only, I’m happy with OE springs so I would really appreciate honest feedback once you have fitted & tested your car with both installed.Try just the sways first. I've had the front sway on for a week. Rear sway on the way. Front sway alone makes comfort mode a little stiffer feeling than stock sport mode. (I don't mind using comfort mode now!) After i get the rear sway on I'll go hit the twisties and see if the wallow is gone. Haven't felt it yet but havent driven hard much yet.
With improved sways in-place, the spring is handling a different load. It's not compressed as much as it would be with the stock swaybar in place. It's not as straightforward as "springs do this and sways do that" unless you're comparing springs to springs, with no change in sway bars, or sways to sways with no change in springs.I called Eibach a while back and they told me the springs would have a much bigger impact on the sensation of the losing the rear when hitting a bump turning, not the sways since the sways stop body roll. No clue if that’s right. I plan just to do springs in the near future.
I called Eibach a while back and they told me the springs would have a much bigger impact on the sensation of the losing the rear when hitting a bump turning, not the sways since the sways stop body roll. No clue if that’s right. I plan just to do springs in the near future.
My hope was that adding just the sway bars would 1) reduce body roll when cornering, and 2) get rid of the unsettled read-end behaviour when the rear goes over a bump or dip during cornering. Any comments on that?I've had the Eibach sways front a back installed for about two weeks, stock springs. I'd say the biggest thing I notice is that when it feels like the my rear starts to slide, it cleans up much quicker. I'm not sure if that makes sense. Its feels tighter, which is what I was expecting. So, they are working for me.
My hope was that adding just the sway bars would 1) reduce body roll when cornering, and 2) get rid of the unsettled read-end behavior when the rear goes over a bump or dip during cornering. Any comments on that?
I’m hoping for the same result, I believe our suspension setup here in OZ was done differently to our North American brothers & sisters, maybe because we are RHD, I don’t know, but like you state above these are the exact scenarios I want to eliminate & I believe that up rating the sway bars will deliver this. Other threads/forums I’ve read & YouTube videos viewed also seem to support this.My hope was that adding just the sway bars would 1) reduce body roll when cornering, and 2) get rid of the unsettled read-end behaviour when the rear goes over a bump or dip during cornering. Any comments on that?
#1 for sure. With just the front sway on the turn in is much faster and more crisp and the body roll is gone.My hope was that adding just the sway bars would 1) reduce body roll when cornering, and 2) get rid of the unsettled read-end behaviour when the rear goes over a bump or dip during cornering. Any comments on that?
My hope was that adding just the sway bars would 1) reduce body roll when cornering, and 2) get rid of the unsettled read-end behaviour when the rear goes over a bump or dip during cornering. Any comments on that?
Thanks for the response. I'm happy with the height where it's at, so would rather not lower the car either. Glad to hear that they help with the body roll can turn in - good things ...For me it seems to be tighter when cornering and during those moments when I'm getting on it from a dead stop to a curve (like pulling out of a side street onto a main drag). As mentioend, the big plus for me is how fast I'm able to correct when/if I get squirrely. I'd imagine that the springs connected with the sways would really do the trick for what you want. The main reason I didn't do both was the lowering. Even though it's very minimal, I've checked the areas where I park and if I was event half an inch lower I'd hit. I just can't do that to my baby.