jimmypet
Well-known member
I race a BMW E30, I have for over 20 years.
Over the last winter I had Chris at Angry Sheep fulfill a long long time wish of recreating a DTM rear subframe and trailing arms.
What we didn't do was switch to a true coil over like the original DTM cars had.
He did a modification to the rear trailing arm that was done on some of the fast EP Z3s and recessed the rear spring down into the trailing arm, and added an adjustable screw jack to the bottom to make weight adjusting super easy. He did a really nice job.
QUESTION: The recessed adjuster (at its middle of its range of adjustment) added 60mm of length required to the static spring length to get back to where I was before this modification.
My original spring was an H&R 120(h) 60(id) 160(rate) + a 20mm thickness of the old seat and adjuster
My head is saying I now need a 200(h) 60(id) 160(rate)
Am I missing any suspension guru spring physics knowledge that says when I grow the spring length I need to change the spring rate?
Or is it as easy as just adding the length to get back to where I was previously?
Also to further complicate it H&R doesn't make a 200mm x 160nm, they make 200 x 180nm -or- 200 x 150nm
I was thinking to try the softer 150 because the delta was less than going up to the 180nm.
Thanks for your suspension knowledge.
Cheers
Jimmy P
Over the last winter I had Chris at Angry Sheep fulfill a long long time wish of recreating a DTM rear subframe and trailing arms.
What we didn't do was switch to a true coil over like the original DTM cars had.
He did a modification to the rear trailing arm that was done on some of the fast EP Z3s and recessed the rear spring down into the trailing arm, and added an adjustable screw jack to the bottom to make weight adjusting super easy. He did a really nice job.
QUESTION: The recessed adjuster (at its middle of its range of adjustment) added 60mm of length required to the static spring length to get back to where I was before this modification.
My original spring was an H&R 120(h) 60(id) 160(rate) + a 20mm thickness of the old seat and adjuster
My head is saying I now need a 200(h) 60(id) 160(rate)
Am I missing any suspension guru spring physics knowledge that says when I grow the spring length I need to change the spring rate?
Or is it as easy as just adding the length to get back to where I was previously?
Also to further complicate it H&R doesn't make a 200mm x 160nm, they make 200 x 180nm -or- 200 x 150nm
I was thinking to try the softer 150 because the delta was less than going up to the 180nm.
Thanks for your suspension knowledge.
Cheers
Jimmy P