I installed a set of the FMS lowering springs several months ago, doing the back ones first and then the front a few weeks later.
When I installed the ones on the rear I immeadiately noticed that when entering a parking lot with a sharp incline up from the street I'd get a loud high pitched "scrunch" like noise and that this happens on any sort of a sharp jolt in the roadway.(though I was certain this was not my tires rubbing anywhere)
When I installed the front springs the same thing happened on that end of my car also.
This is really disconcerting in the long drive from Eureka to Berkeley on highway 101 where there are a lot of dips and irregularities in the road and going around corners and such.(when I'm trying to make time real late at nite, etc.)
I'm not a great enthusiast as a mechanic so have not torn into things to see what might be wrong, but I think I did the job correctly and since I had four chances to foul things up and got the exact same result each time I think the problem might be with the product?
One theory I have is that the springs might have a steeper angle to the coil than the stock ones and I've wondered if the edge at the top might be rubbing on something for this reason? If I took them apart and let a good machinist friend grind away at that edge might this be a solution? Or does anyone have any other ideas?
I'd like to fix this, but don't want to have my car tore apart again without knowing what I'm doing if I can help it.
When I installed the ones on the rear I immeadiately noticed that when entering a parking lot with a sharp incline up from the street I'd get a loud high pitched "scrunch" like noise and that this happens on any sort of a sharp jolt in the roadway.(though I was certain this was not my tires rubbing anywhere)
When I installed the front springs the same thing happened on that end of my car also.
This is really disconcerting in the long drive from Eureka to Berkeley on highway 101 where there are a lot of dips and irregularities in the road and going around corners and such.(when I'm trying to make time real late at nite, etc.)
I'm not a great enthusiast as a mechanic so have not torn into things to see what might be wrong, but I think I did the job correctly and since I had four chances to foul things up and got the exact same result each time I think the problem might be with the product?
One theory I have is that the springs might have a steeper angle to the coil than the stock ones and I've wondered if the edge at the top might be rubbing on something for this reason? If I took them apart and let a good machinist friend grind away at that edge might this be a solution? Or does anyone have any other ideas?
I'd like to fix this, but don't want to have my car tore apart again without knowing what I'm doing if I can help it.
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