Alright mate,
Going back to when you removed the rear adjusters, exactly what did you remove? Is the spring just sitting against the chassis of the car, or is there still a rubber spacer or something?
I remove the adjuster nut from my Bilsteins, but now the springs knock on the threaded isolator that the nut screws on to. I was debating about removing that as well, am not sure how well the springs will like it nut being "secured" up the top.
Evolution of stance of my car since first ownership.
I removed the bottom threaded adjusters but kept the rubber top locators on the spring-chassis.
I have found no issues with it atal and no issues with springs moving out of location as people mentioned may happen. Its impossible for it to move unless you unbolt the shocks from the lower arm to let it drop down further. I wouldnt recommend removing the rubber bit though...
On mine the spring seats on the bottom and the adjuster set up sits on top of the spring followed by the rubber ring.
With the original rubber isolators, they twist locked onto the spring. To keep the spring straight.
Are these the rubber bits you are using, or are you referring to something else that came in your kit?
Cheers mate,
Alright mate,
I ended up using the original mounts and turning the spring up the other way after countless research of which way the spring should go.
Bilstein them selfs told me to mount it upside down....
I get the same drop, and from what I can hear I haven't hear the springs knock amy more.
This was the top mount I was using with out the adjuster nut.
One more question, when the car weight is on the rear springs, do the tighter coils touch? My springs seem fully compressed at the top, all the time... as if the spring isn't strong enough.
Looks good man. Shame you can't flare the bumper the match the arches. What did you do about the plastic underneath the arch?
Ahh I see. Surely with out the liners it will be prone to rust ?
Will the bumper be heated by a body shop? Or a diy jobby?
From what im lead to believe the spring has a build in helper which is why they are built the way they are with small gaps then larger gaps..