just wondering if someone has come up with a solution for adding a rear sway bar to the festy?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
rear sway bar
Collapse
X
-
-
FF.com member, Russian race team, made a removable anti-sway bar and we used the same design and tested it on the track. Our tests showed the extra stiffness in the rear was counter productive. The rear tires would lose grip faster in corners with the bar than without. If you want the better handling in the rear lower the back by cutting or changing out the springs. I do not recommend the rear anti-sway bar. Make one for the front across the struts if you have to have an anti-sway bar, my two cents.If the only tool you have is a hammer, then every job looks like a nail.
Comment
-
Comment
-
I did not use the threaded rod i used a stiffer design, and I had lowered the car. I believe that it was just too stiff. I agree that a little stiffer is better across the rear trailing arm, just don't go crazy because it has to give a little.If the only tool you have is a hammer, then every job looks like a nail.
Comment
-
Personally I don't think there is an quick substitute for switching to an Aspire trailing arm. As to whether the built-in torsion bar on them is of any use is a moot point (I can't see that piece of bar steel doing a heck of a lot compared to the effect of a front sway bar) but achieving 4 x 100 wheel pattern, larger brakes and overall wider stance (without using spacers) is a wonderful thing. Advancedynamix has gotten around this by re-drilling Festy drums to make for a 4 x 100 pattern but this would be finicky work for us ordinary stiffs and I don't recall him even being a fan of add-on torsion bars to trailing arms.
Comment
Comment