talontsiawd
Well-Known Member
lowest i can go w/o noise
That does not seem right at all. What system do you have?
lowest i can go w/o noise
That does not seem right at all. What system do you have?
thats what i did with the pearch, but for it to contact the spring the car sits SOOOOOOO high up which defeats the whole purpose of a coil over kit
ya im not trying to dump the car, i just would like it back where it sat with the H&R's right now im like 1" or 1.5" higher
im supposed to meet up with comptech today if the weather stays nice.
It sounds like you're trying to adjust ride height w/ the spring perch. All I can speak from is my own experience, but that spring perch gets pre-loaded, and then you leave it there.
So, if your shocks are threaded for independent ride height adjustment.....
It sounds like you're trying to adjust ride height w/ the spring perch. All I can speak from is my own experience, but that spring perch gets pre-loaded, and then you leave it there.
Like talontsiawd said, the bottom tube (assuming your shock body is threaded) is where the height adjusting happens.
From Tein's site;
Full Length Adjustable -
Vehicle ride height and spring pre-load can be adjusted independently. Ride height is adjustable in two ways: a. adjustable shock length, and b. adjustable spring seat.
a. The lower mounting bracket can be adjusted, thus changing the overall length of the shock, and therefore altering the vehicle's ride height. This also allows the user to determine suspension travel and droop.
b. The adjustable spring seat allows for independent adjustment of spring pre-load without affecting vehicle ride height
Point 'a' tells me you can drop wherever you choose, w/o changing spring perch.
Good luck, and don't worry. You have a great product that'll work just like you want it to.
I was just reading what i got off the site- http://www.tein.com/products/features.html#RideHeight
That's why i asked if this was true but i'm sure he's working on it right now and didn't respond so i pretty much jumped the gun.
If that is the case, i don't get why the springs are preloaded. Like i said acouple pages back, i haven't ever owned coilovers myself. I have worked on cars with them and the spring shouldn't be able to move freely when it's jacked up, which is what it sounds like is going on. Atleast i've only seen that with really poor quality coilovers. I don't know anyone who owns teins though. So now i'm more confused about this whole deal, if this is, infact correct.