lowering
If you anneal it, heat it, compress it, and heat treat it, you now have a shorter spring with almost the same spring rate but less travel before it goes into coil bind.
If someone can suggest a way to modify a pre-made spring without horribly compromising the spring design and performance, I'd love to hear about it.
In all honesty though, if the coilover doesn't go low enough for your tastes, get different coilovers. If you shorten the spring, you're getting really close to bottoming out the damper on even small bumps. Just like the old NASCAR joke that vehicle dynamicists like to tell, "any suspension will work if you don't let it"...
This isn't like putting lowering springs on stock-length struts. Coilovers are designed to have travel over the whole adjustment range of the spring that they come with. Change the spring length, and who knows where you stand..
There are all kinds of coilovers on the market that are specifically designed for going impractically low without any concern for actual suspension performance. Just buy some coilovers like that.
Last edited by Fabrik8; Jan 2, 2010 at 04:38 PM.






