RCS
Member
Registered: 26th Jan 05
Location: Lichfield/Dundee
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by Dave A
coil springs are designed for coils to touch, it helps give the spring their progressive nature.
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RCS
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Registered: 26th Jan 05
Location: Lichfield/Dundee
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by Dave A
quote: Originally posted by AK
Dave ..... really 
doesnt make sense to me :/
yes, when 2 coils sit on eachother it changes the static poundage of the spring. as you corner right, the right spring will compress and the centre coils will sit on eachother meaning that the active coils (upper and lower) are now controlling the spring rate.
On the left spring it has the opposite effect. It gives the spring the ability to behave differently under different loads which improves handling.
Most road springs have lighter lower poundage coils on the upper and lower sections and much stiffer coils in the centre. over smaller bumps the upper and lower springs control the spring softly, but as you enter a fast corner where you want less body roll these parts of the spring will compress under load and the centre coils will be in play, which are higher poundage and will give a lot less body roll.
The upper and lower coils are known as dead coils as they do nothing!
Progressive springs are produced by varying the main diameter of the coil.
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Vaux Lad
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Registered: 15th Dec 04
Location: Stoke-on-Trent
User status: Offline
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And no they shouldn't touch at all.
If the coils are touching, there coil bound giving fook all movement=poor handling
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Dave A
USER UNDER INVESTIGATION - DO NOT TRADE
Registered: 10th Dec 03
Location: County Durham
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Bilstein must be making their springs incorrectly then, also it seems Eibach springs are leaving the factory incorrectly.
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Dave A
USER UNDER INVESTIGATION - DO NOT TRADE
Registered: 10th Dec 03
Location: County Durham
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by RCS
quote: Originally posted by Dave A
quote: Originally posted by AK
Dave ..... really 
doesnt make sense to me :/
yes, when 2 coils sit on eachother it changes the static poundage of the spring. as you corner right, the right spring will compress and the centre coils will sit on eachother meaning that the active coils (upper and lower) are now controlling the spring rate.
On the left spring it has the opposite effect. It gives the spring the ability to behave differently under different loads which improves handling.
Most road springs have lighter lower poundage coils on the upper and lower sections and much stiffer coils in the centre. over smaller bumps the upper and lower springs control the spring softly, but as you enter a fast corner where you want less body roll these parts of the spring will compress under load and the centre coils will be in play, which are higher poundage and will give a lot less body roll.
The upper and lower coils are known as dead coils as they do nothing!
Progressive springs are produced by varying the main diameter of the coil.
Not at all, 'progressive' has very little to do with the coil wire diameter and more to do with the way the spring behaves under compression. As the coils go coilbound the static poundage of the spring changes giving the spring a progressive method of compression. The more the spring is compressed the higher the static poundage becomes.
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Kano
Member
Registered: 29th Aug 04
Location: Fife
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by Vaux Lad
And no they shouldn't touch at all.
If the coils are touching, there coil bound giving fook all movement=poor handling
Incorrect.. I think the moral of this thread is only comment if you actually know what your talking about. Good old internet..
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SAL
Premium Member
Registered: 19th Dec 05
Location: Radlett, Hertfordshire
User status: Offline
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If a spring "spring's" it work's
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gazza808
Member
Registered: 30th Jun 08
Location: Peterborough
User status: Offline
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LMFAO at they are meant to touch!!
thats the most stupid thing i've ever heard.
once the coils touch you have no suspension it's solid.
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Tedney
Member
Registered: 16th May 08
Location: North Yorkshire
User status: Offline
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Mine used to sit like this on my old Corsa and they worked fine. Like Stavs says:
quote: Originally posted by Stavs
If a spring "spring's" it work's
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alan-g-w
Member
Registered: 9th Nov 07
Location: Glasgow
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by gazza808
LMFAO at they are meant to touch!!
thats the most stupid thing i've ever heard.
once the coils touch you have no suspension it's solid.
Since I'm not sure I'm not giving any more advice, but if it's only the two middle coils touching you'd still get a fair bit of travel.
Still not as much as I'd think you should be getting though...
What are they saying on corsa-C?
[Edited on 20-10-2008 by alan-g-w]
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Vaux Lad
Member
Registered: 15th Dec 04
Location: Stoke-on-Trent
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by Kano
quote: Originally posted by Vaux Lad
And no they shouldn't touch at all.
If the coils are touching, there coil bound giving fook all movement=poor handling
Incorrect.. I think the moral of this thread is only comment if you actually know what your talking about. Good old internet..
So your coils should touch then, giving no spring movement, making the car bounce about over bumps instead of letting them spring do the work
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Rob B
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Registered: 8th Jan 04
Location: Area Motorsport Drives: Race EP3
User status: Offline
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It's fine, my H&R's are like that.
Dave A is right
[Edited on 20-10-2008 by Rob B]
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Scotty C
Member
Registered: 6th Nov 05
Location: Kidderminster Drives: 1.6 16v Sport
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by GSi_16v
quote: Originally posted by Scatt
But everyone with C's put B springs on
i havent
Ok, Not everyone. But alot of people have
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Scotty C
Member
Registered: 6th Nov 05
Location: Kidderminster Drives: 1.6 16v Sport
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by alan-g-w
What are they saying on corsa-C?
It's fine...
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