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#57 |
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Drives: His Wife Crazy Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Silas Deane Auto,CT Name: Rob Anderson
Posts: 1,789
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lol
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#58 |
![]() ![]() Drives: 2SS RJT RS/Sunroof Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Washington, DC
Posts: 868
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Another Update!
After speaking with Pete I have decided to go with the sub-fame inserts as he suggested. He feels that this is the best way to go to get the cart to where I want it which is just firming up the rear end and making it feel as planted as the front does now with the front sway bar.
As I have stated before I'm not looking for a racing type set-up with my suspension and he believes that the sub-frame inserts will give me what I'm looking for more so that just adding a rear sway bar. If I add the rear sway bar it might not really get me the improvements I am looking for. If the sub-frame inserts do not do the trick than the rear sway bar is still an option, but Pete really believe that this won't be the case and I trust his professional opinion, he hasn't been wrong so far so that is all I can ask for. So Pedders will be sending the sub-frame inserts to TandT and hopefully Tim will be able to install them with the same precesion he did the front sway bar and end links. The sub-frame inserts will be the only mod done at this time. I will wait to do the lowering springs until I have driven the car and given some feedback on what the car feels like with just the sub-frame inserts added. He is a question for you Pete. I have noticed since adding the front sway bar that while driving on curves on some bumpy roads around 45mph I have noticed that while the front of the car absorbs the bumps and stays perfectly on line the rear end will kind of bump and kick out. Now before the front end would act much the same way as the back but after adding the front sway it was drastically improved. My quetion is will the sub-frame inserts solve this type of problem? Thanks again Pete |
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#59 | |
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Drives: Camaro Justice Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Virginia
Posts: 20,171
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Quote:
What you describe is rear end step out and that is cuased by the entire IRS shifting under load in the heavily NVH voided sub-frame bushes. Under the conditiontions you describe, the rear end is steering the car. That is exactly what the sub-frame bushes will address. They are shipping today. www.PeddersUSA.com The Book on 5th Gen Suspension
Last edited by JusticePete; 08-24-2010 at 04:01 PM. |
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#60 | |
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Just Because!
Drives: 2010 SIM 2SSRS Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: San Jose, Ca
Posts: 6,909
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And get ready to be buying more red suspension parts.... its an addiction! Now I want more power!! ![]() ![]() ![]() J |
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#61 |
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Roll Tide
Drives: 2010 2SS RJT/BLK 6Spd Man Join Date: May 2009
Location: Talladega, Alabama
Posts: 4,378
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OK a noob question here please forgive me for this crazy question but I honestly don't know. SO here it goes.
From my limited understanding the reason you put sways on the front and rear is to limit body roll and " Swaying" Correct? Lowering springs will give you the more aggressive stance by lowering the car, Correct? Then why would you need the sub frame bushings inserts if you have front and rear sways, what is the purpose of those inserts. Now after you answer that? Do I need the insert after the front and sways are installed? How can I, Noob, tell driving my car? I appreciate the info.
__________________
MUSTANG...Like Bringing a Hot Dog to a Steak Dinner....There is no comparison.
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#62 | |
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Drives: Camaro Justice Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Virginia
Posts: 20,171
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If your foundation under your house is cracked, do you fix the squeaking screen door on the porch expecting the crack to go away?
At Pedders we approach aftermarket suspension modifications in a philosophical way that is quite different from all other suspension companies. We examine a vehicle and look for the weakest links in the vehicle because addressing those will yield the greatest performance gain. We do not look at what people think is sexy and will line up to buy. Sway bars are a great example. We could put 6' diameter sway bars on the rear of the Camaro and the rear end would still step out because the cause of rear end step out is not the sway bar diameter. It is the NVH voided sub-frame bushes. http://www.peddersusa.com/PS_images/assets/EP1200-1.gif The OE NVH voids allow the sub-frame to move around. The foundation is not as stable as most enthusiast drivers would prefer. Instead of replacing the entire bush, we just fill the voids. As RWHP and driver demands raise the need for even greater stability we have more aggressive choices. The point is that when the rear IRS assembly moves of shifts under load from turning, acceleration or bumps in the road the sub-frame shifts and essentially steers the vehicle in a condition known as rear end step out. The voids in the pictures are the reason this occurs. It occurs in a number of high priced Euro-vehicles as well as the Chrysler LX. Some companies choose to fix the screen door instead of addressing a foundational issue at the foundational level. Sway bars are not the answer. Braces are not the answer. The ONLY answer is to improve the stability of the four IRS mounting points. You can see the IRS sub-frame assembly is no longer moving, twisting, or doing anything undesirable. It is now stable and allows the rest of the Camaro state-of-the-art IRS to function as designed. You could weld a brace to it. You could do a lot of things to it, but the correct way to resolve it is with w street civil set of EP1200 inserts for probably 85 or 90% of Camaro owners. As you performance demands increase, we offer a full bush replacement and then a Delryin like durometer EP1200HD. Once the sub-frame bushes are in place and you Camaro foundation sound lowering springs and other suspension upgrades will work well because you have created a sound foundation to build on. In the Camaro community, especially for those who own or have owned earlier versions of the car selling sub-frame and other chassis braces is an easy sell. The older Camaros needed them. Your 5th Gen doesn't need chassis braces or triangulation unless you have installed a full race cage and intend to tie the additional braces to the cage. Most Camaro owners never experience understeer and the OE Camaro does understeer when driven past 9/10s. Since this is true, we recommend only a front sway bar to reduce the lean and roll that some Camaro owners find objectionable. What we do recommend to ALL Camaro owners are radius and sub-frame bush inserts as the lowest hanging fruit to improve brake pedal feel, to remove that slight shudder in the steering wheel over bumps and sub-frame bush inserts to eliminate rear end step out. 90% of the people that own a Camaro will feel the difference and enjoy their cars more. If you click on the 5th Gen Suspension book in my signature you can read a more detailed explanation of the 5th Gen suspension, brakes, wheels and tires. Bottom line, address the problem at the source and never put lipstick on a pig. It is still a pig and now looks silly with the lipstick. ![]() www.PeddersUSA.com The Book on 5th Gen Suspension
Last edited by JusticePete; 08-24-2010 at 04:01 PM. |
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#63 |
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Petro-sexual
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Pete - your sig' is MIA
Great information from all our Sponsors in this thread. KUDOS to everyone.
__________________
'20 ZL1 Black "Fury" A10, PDR, Exposed CF Extractor Magnuson Magnum DI TVS2650R // RFBG // Soler 103 // TooHighPSI Port Injection // THPSI Billet Lid // FF // Katech Drop-In // PLM Heat Exchanger // ZLE Cradle bushings // BMR Chassis-Suspension Stuff // aFe Bars // Diode Dynamics LEDs // ACS Composites Guards // CF Dash // Aeroforce // tint // other stuffs |
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#64 |
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Drives: Camaro Justice Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Virginia
Posts: 20,171
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#65 |
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Drives: Camaro Justice Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Virginia
Posts: 20,171
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Ok, now I have doubles????
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#66 |
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Petro-sexual
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I see it now... Maybe it was my PC. Sorry
![]() Carry on!
__________________
'20 ZL1 Black "Fury" A10, PDR, Exposed CF Extractor Magnuson Magnum DI TVS2650R // RFBG // Soler 103 // TooHighPSI Port Injection // THPSI Billet Lid // FF // Katech Drop-In // PLM Heat Exchanger // ZLE Cradle bushings // BMR Chassis-Suspension Stuff // aFe Bars // Diode Dynamics LEDs // ACS Composites Guards // CF Dash // Aeroforce // tint // other stuffs |
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#67 | |
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Just Because!
Drives: 2010 SIM 2SSRS Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: San Jose, Ca
Posts: 6,909
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Quote:
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#68 |
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Roll Tide
Drives: 2010 2SS RJT/BLK 6Spd Man Join Date: May 2009
Location: Talladega, Alabama
Posts: 4,378
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Jason,
I understand your point and I appreciate the info. So if I undertand you correct it really depends on what you are going to do with your car. Remember I'm a noob at this stuff. Basically I do not drag or road race and I am looking for a stance and to eliminate the body roll when entering the interstate and things like that. Any " Racing " that I do is more of street light to street light kinda stuff or more of a roll from 35 to 75. Kinda like you said to make the blood rush from you head. I am new to Camaro's and this is the first I have owned, so I don't really know all the other technical stuff but am learning. Several members have suggested sways and lowering springs and this is why I asking, not a specific brand but more of what. I am sure that there are many flaws in the Camaro's suspension if you intend to race and I am sure that the vendors here have the perfect solution to fix these flaws, but I am not wanting to rebuild the whole suspension because it can be a never ending story, if you know what I mean. So that is why I am asking these questions, to learn without wasting money so to speak.
__________________
MUSTANG...Like Bringing a Hot Dog to a Steak Dinner....There is no comparison.
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#69 |
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Drives: Camaro Justice Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Virginia
Posts: 20,171
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Let me try again.
You want to build a fence. The first thing you do is set the posts in the ground, preferably in cement. With the fence posts set, you can build any kind of fence you want. If you choose to set your fence posts in Jello, instead of cement, no matter what the posts were made of (tooth picks, carbon fiber or titanium) they would all wobble in the Jello foundation and the post material would not matter. ![]() Black OE rubber bushes with NVH voids = Jello / wiggle / rear end step out Black OE rubber bushes with voids filled by Pedders EP1200 inserts = Cement / stability / predictability / rear end step out.You can add anything and everything to the rear of the Camaro, but until you address the foundational issue with IRS sub-frame stability rear end step out not only remains, but can get much more pronounced. Always, always start with the foundation. |
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#70 | |
![]() ![]() Drives: 2SS RJT RS/Sunroof Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Washington, DC
Posts: 868
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Quote:
And is this "rear end step out" what I feel when taking a bumpy curb at 45mph and the back end feels like it is skipping across the road? |
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