Originally posted by darkfact
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Need a straight answer on strut tower braces.
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Brian
93L - 5SP, FMS springs, 323 alloys, 1st gen B6, ported head & intake, FMS cam, ported exhaust manifold w/2-1/4" head pipe.
04 Mustang GT, 5SP, CAI, TFS plenum, 70mm TB, catted X, Pypes 304SS cat-back, Hurst Billet+ shifter, SCT/Bama tuned....4.10's & cams coming soon
62 Galaxie 2D sedan project- 428, 3x2V, 4SP, 3.89TLOC
1 wife, 2 kids, 9 dogs, 4 cats......
Not enough time or money for any of them
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Jerry
Team Lightning
Owner of Team Lightning
90 L "Peewee" B6D. Bought new May 16,1990
92 L Thunder BP G5M-R Turbo B6T electronics. Jan 2016 FOTM winner SOLD
93 L Lightning. BP
Not a user of drugs or alcohol, Just addicted to Festiva's
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Advance also didn't go with the famed Aspire beam than everyone wants, and he posted a vid of a stock carb Festy with NOTHING but tires and wheels done to it performing nicely.
I've never had a strut brace on a car, so I guess my opinion is void technically, but I would personally go for a lower tie bar before a strut brace, and I probably wouldn't do that either. In fact I'm probably yanking the factory one from my Escort to make the exhaust routing less stupid/more straight.
But again, YMMV, though I think ADX's results speak volumes for his methods.Any difference that makes no difference is no difference.
Old Blue- New Tricks
91 Festiva FSM PDF - Dropbox
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From my experience with strut tower braces (on my old DSM's) they significantly reduced body roll during cornering. I'd really like to do the same with my Festiva, and of course I do realize that this is one small step of many. Thanks for all the helpful info guys.1989 Festiva L Carby
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I don't mind getting a bit of flak for this. It costs a pile of money to design, develop and build a durable car (and please don't try to tell me Festys aren't) and when I see a 'tent pole and two shelf brackets that are off at an angle' pretending to significantly stiffen a car I know right off that there is going to be very little difference in the end run. But, like upgrading rims and tires, there are those among us that really "want to believe". I can live with that and so can all (certainly most) of us.
Matter of fact although I have no strut brace (nor plans for one) I'm happy as a clam already with Aspire 'goodies' and premium 14 inch tires. The Aspire sway bar (despite qualified naysayers) is likely the biggest improvement to reduced roll during cornering that has happened to me.
Festys were built to absolute minimum spec (solely to reduce weight, I suspect) and that's why brake and suspension upgrades are so useful, and especially if there is any plan to transcend beyond a B3 powerplant.
We're having fun, right?
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LOL. Tent pole and shelf brackets. I'm curious why anyone would say a stiffer sway bar wouldn't aid in body roll reduction. I mean, it's even called an anti roll bar too.
There was a test I remember someone posted you could do. It was actually the "proper" way to install a strut bar, and the "test" was just a quick little thing to prove it's doing anything at all. Jack the whole front of the car up at once, and then install the bar. Drop it, move it back and forwards to settle it in, and then try to take the bar back off without jacking it back up. I guess if you're set on not believing the thing does anything you could say the bar has just bowed and wedged itself in but isn't really providing any support, but then nearly every argument has a counter if you try hard enough.
I suppose you could prove it without doubt by using a strain gauge wired between the towers at a pre-load, then drive it hard with no bar and note the amount of relief, if any, it shows. Then do it again with the bar. That would be a fun weekend project.Any difference that makes no difference is no difference.
Old Blue- New Tricks
91 Festiva FSM PDF - Dropbox
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How much difference a strut tower bar makes depends entirely upon how ridgid the car is structurally around the strut towers in the first place. The Festiva is built like a brick outhouse when you hold it up next to, say, a Toyota Matrix (used that as an example because I own one and it's floppy as hell), or to use an extreme example a Pontiac Transport/Chev Lumina (a van that was famous for collapsing its A-pillars during windshield replacement). So if I was going to put my wagon on the track a strut bar (and a few more braces in other places) would be almost mandatory. But I'd never put one on the Festy because my time/money would be better spent in other places to help its handling characteristics.
You can blow your money on one because you think it looks cool (which is a perfectly legit reason to spend money I'll admit) but it won't help the car handle as much you think it will.
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I put a FMS strut bar on 'Tiva. Ofcourse I got it an FMS body kit, FMS header, 2 VAS, extra dizzy, extra starter, extra alt, & a crap load of other stuff for $250. So why not install it, & I do fell some stiffin' during aggressive turns measured by BDS.Last edited by navdoc101; 02-07-2013, 11:58 AM.
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^ I just realized your avatar is my desktop background on my PC at workBarbie Car - '90 L-plus_2nd Gen SOHC B6+rear turbo @ 8 psi
Festycul - '9? 5spd_full roll cage, completely gutted, hydro g-series, B6T @ 15psi, rocketchip ecu,Willwood master cylinder, Mit. Galant VR-4 rotors, Hawk racing pads, capri knuckles, 323 LCA's, BrideLow Max seats, 5pt. harness, lexan windows, fuel cell, aluminum radiator, 323 coilovers
Elvis - '93 L 5spd_B3+T build in progress
WhiteGirl - '93 GL Immaculate shape, deciding what to build with it?
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I believe I heard someone say that their passenger axle hop was reduced by the installation of one of these strut tower bars.In love with a MadScientist!:thumbright:
There's a fine line between breathtaking ingenuity and "That's the stupidest thing I've ever seen!"
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Originally posted by darkfact View PostAll I'm saying is why shouldn't I implement what gives a noticeable difference in handling?
Chassis bracing on a Festiva, if done at all, should be done as a finishing touch AFTER getting the entire suspension system up to snuff. Let's face it, if you're sitting on nothing but stock components everywhere else you won't even be physically able to push the car hard enough to put any lateral load on that part of the car (thus rendering the strut bar useless). The tires will break loose or you'll roll the car before the point where a bar will help you. Not even sure if The Stig could manage something like that.
You should start with an Aspire sway bar at least (because they're cheap and will make a REAL difference), and if you want to go nuts do a full Aspire swap with Rio struts and hats (Rios have a ball bearing in the hat, helps deal with steering effort when you go with wider tires). If you want the car to be stiff enough to give you back problems, cut some Rio/Aspire coils down and if you want a decent ride go for coilovers.
Rubber is a massive (though much pricier) consideration as well. Your car will never handle very well on the stock 12s unless you find some 12" super crazy JDM kei car dorifto racing slicks or something (good luck). If you do an Aspire swap your best bet is to lurk CL for some VW/Civic 14" mounted takeoffs for cheap and you'll likely be doing pretty good.
Until you do _at least_ one thing on that list (Aspire sway bar or tires), talking about strut bars does not make you an enthusiast. It makes you a ricer.
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Originally posted by Tommychu View PostUntil you do _at least_ one thing on that list (Aspire sway bar or tires), talking about strut bars does not make you an enthusiast. It makes you a ricer.
I am no ricer at all but have driven little square boxes of many stripes since 1969. And stupidly trying to improve upon each one. I was gifted a 64 Mini 850 from an elderly lady that wanted her lo-mile car appreciated. It was in beautiful shape (we're talking 1974 here) and was the original model with rubber donut suspension, exterior hinges and sliding windows and with a push button starter on the floor, long springy shift coming right out from the firewall and an 850cc (albeit in perfect shape) "lawn-mower" engine out front. It promptly got the whole treatment of front discs and an "S" engine, short throw transmission, and gauge cluster but you know what: I really should have left it alone and enjoyed it for what it was. Under those circumstances I might have still had it to this day.
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