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08-19-2008, 12:33 AM | #1 |
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Sway Bars for the E9x M3???
So who makes an upgraded sway-bar for the front/rear for the E9xM3?
Thanks, TomK
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08-19-2008, 04:46 PM | #3 | |
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Mick, I've yet to own/drive a car that from the factory that offered the roll stiffness to which I am accustomed. I habitually like stiff set-ups and with the EDC, choose to address that viathe bars. I have a track day on September 26th, so I'll see how it goes. I'm just being proactive.
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08-19-2008, 11:40 PM | #4 | |
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If you want it flatter and you want more grip then put in stiffer springs - that reduces the weight transfer and makes the inside tire do more work, raising the speed where the outside tire overloads and starts to slide. |
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08-20-2008, 02:55 AM | #5 |
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its tuff to have a decent thread these days....
the man just asked if anyone knew of any sways.... he could be running R comps at the track... and sways will def help in that situation.... a common rule is..... more grip = go stiffer i love the over engineering thought process.... thats then turned into another post on these forums... |
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08-20-2008, 04:11 AM | #6 |
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I prefer stiffer roll bars too. Depends on your driving style and feel.
I don't care if a japanese mits something with 4 wheel drive and a tehcno feast has more in corner grip, but rolls like a jelly. I prefer feel and balance and hate body roll ! (With very low profile tyres as I am sure you are all aware the contact patch will reduce very quickly if the car rolls by a lot and lose all grip. As tyre flex is not there to compensate on low pro's) HOWEVER fitting H&R springs has improved cornering balance significantly to the point I am no longer thinking of roll bars. Suspect a combination of ride height reduction and increased stiffness. |
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08-20-2008, 05:57 AM | #7 |
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Lads
Wasn't trying to make the thread degenerate. Its just I have tracked the car twice now and found the combination of feel & balance to be perfect with EDC set to sport, and felt body roll was not a factor. The car is very neutral, very willing to turn in, and if you have overdone your entry speed a touch of trailbrake gets you turning in very quickly and set up for perfect apexing or beautiful drifts (whatever your poison). All my passsengers commented on how surprised they were at the feel as stock, and that the car belied its apparent size. I come from an E46 M3 that had KW v3's upgraded arb's, camber plates etc etc and I just urge people to try the car as stock before changing stuff. it really is very accomplished. Certainly as someone who just enjoys drifting the car, and nice balanced handling, I don't feel any need to change anything relative to my last car and certainly don't feel I could do anything suspension wise that would lower lap times. I acknowledge that if you are a hardcore tracker you might prefer somewhat a stiffer feel, but I also believe too many people think that you can fix all handling woes with sway bars etc, when in fact it often just leads to greater understeer, and then a vicious circle of more modifications etc etc Thats why I was just curious if the OP had driven the car in anger and what he found to be deficient about the stock handling. Regards Mick |
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08-20-2008, 06:15 AM | #8 | |
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I did not track the car before fitting the H&R springs (Should of TBH), you will find a write up on the differences. A good friend who also has an E92M3 compared the two on his favourite route and concluded the same as me. Tony did have 3 CSL's at one time one race car in BRITCAR I think and a modded trackday car as well as a roadie !. I trust Tony's judgement and he is fitting them to his E92 M3 after comparing the two http://www.m3post.com/forums/showthread.php?t=149729 My initial comments : " 10mm spacers all round I might try 13mm on the rear to fill out a little more. Regarding handling & ride comfort Rise is marginally stiffer, feels a little tighter and planted. Little or no reduction in comfort. I had it set up by a race team and they strung the car properly, factory was out especially at the rear. corner weights a little out (not adjustable) After fitting springs corner weights much better, they reduced the toe in at the rear from factory and put 2mm toe out on the front. Cambers adjusted where possible (reduced ride height adds a little negative camber) Turn in much better, steering feels weightier and more acccurate Virtually eliminates float at speed Body roll feels much reduced (I investigated aftermarket roll bars, it now feels much better and I am not looking any more !) EDC seems better between settings, Normal is well balanced and my every day setting Full stiff much better, no longer fidgety and bouncy if driven on a less than perfect road. When I am pushing on I choose full stiff and enjoy the hell out of it. Before I only got on with full stiff on the smoothest of surfaces as it simply felt unsettled Adjustable susp now works, when driving hard the slight compromise on road surface transmission and stiffness is the right trade for a little more forgiving and surface absorbing ride. Both feel taughter and sportier Overall I would say it's significantly better than stock and it looks much better too " |
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08-20-2008, 01:11 PM | #9 |
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So... I'm to assume that there are no upgraded sway-bars then...
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08-20-2008, 02:32 PM | #10 |
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It all depends on what type of tracks you would be running on. Sway bar could easily changed the characteristics of your car being oversteer or understeer.
P.S. I called H&R and they say they are developing a set of sway bars which are coming out in 2 months. |
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08-20-2008, 05:58 PM | #12 |
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I've heard so many negative comments about putting spacers on, and the wheel bearings will suffer and lead to failure, as well as the steering geometry getting out of sync.
Could someone enlighten me whether this is a myth or is there real concerns? I've read that Porsche are doing a limited run of Caymans with "wheel spacers" with GT3 wheels etc. I am really puzzled ... because Porsche won't do it if it will lead to bearing failure etc.! The reason I am asking is because I have a set of original CSL wheels (not the Competition pack replicas) which I plan to use on the car when I track it. I don't know whether they will fit as standard or whether they'll need spacers. If I need spacers then I don't want to end up with a massive bill to replace any bearings because of failure. I would rather run on the stock tyres and replace them! Any comments/input will be greatly appreciated.
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08-20-2008, 05:59 PM | #13 |
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i was reading in a car magazine the other day that one of the most sold modification for M3 so far has been Hotchkis sway bars. i never even knew they're making them.
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08-20-2008, 08:46 PM | #14 | |
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08-20-2008, 09:08 PM | #15 |
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I would bet Ground Control will have them at some point.
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08-20-2008, 09:30 PM | #16 |
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You need to run spacers with the CSL wheels to prevent damage. Your CSL wheels need at least a 10mm spacer (probably 15 or 20mm) to get your offset close to the stock front offset on the e9x M3.
Besides, bearings aren't that expensive.
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08-21-2008, 01:31 AM | #17 |
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Yes, I assume the usual suspects will have their offerings... HR, Hotch, GC, ect. But none now?...I wonder if I can get a buddy to bend one custom....
Be good, TomK
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08-21-2008, 02:18 AM | #18 |
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I am personally not concerned about 10mm spacers affecting wheel bearings.
Look at what is actually happening here, the centreline of the wheel and centre point of the forces will move 10mm further out. We can assume that a spacer acts in the same way as a wheel with a different offset (high quality spacers) The forces on the wheel bearings may see additional leverage and therefore additional force, but this needs to be put in context. The small potential increase will be marginal in comparison to the varied forces a wheel bearing may or may not see in various road/track situations. IF any increase was marginal then the bearings would be a marginal and a problem. I am not sure what front wheel bearings an E46 CSL has but the CSL alloys have a different offset to std E46M3 wheels. Most aftermarket wheels have different offsets AC Schnitzer e92 M3 wheels vary by as much as 15mm increase in offset (ie reduced negative offset) so the same effect as fitting a 15mm spacer to stock wheels. I ran an E39 M5 with 10mm front spacers for 70,000 miles no problems. Porsche sell different wheels or the same car with marginally different offsets and the latest option list allows you to factory order 5mm spacers ! I owned a Porsche 964RS for 10 years, the standard mod for track work was 22mm rear spacers and 11mm front spacers. I never changed this set up and never had a problem. Look at FACTORY race cars they run stock bearings with some very aggressive offset wheels. I am sure you could get a situation where you did have problems but not without first fitting a wide arch kit ! |
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08-21-2008, 06:00 PM | #19 |
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I am considering putting the CSL wheels on the E92 M3 not on an E46. Thank you for the very informative post.
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08-21-2008, 06:17 PM | #20 | |
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08-22-2008, 05:14 PM | #21 |
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I read it from luxury modified and saw they made the sways for our car. I called yesterday and they are not going to be out until end of this year.
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