Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Swift Spring Retrofit (into BC Racing Coilovers)

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Swift Spring Retrofit (into BC Racing Coilovers)

    This is offered as an upgrade when purchasing new, but I'm wondering if anyone has an understanding of what variant of Swift Springs are the go-to.

    Both the front & rear BC e30 springs are 62mm ID.
    Sandwiched between the height or preload adjustable rings and the springs are black plastic centering rings.

    Swift Springs come in a number of options.
    A. Metric, in 60mm and 65mm ID variants
    B. Standard Coilover Springs, most notably in 2.5" or 63.5mm ID

    What is the correct interchangeable option?

    1. Remove the plastic retainers and use 60mm (blue)?
    2. Leave the retainers but use 65mm (orange)?
    3. Leave the retainers, but use the 2.5"/63.5mm equivalent (gold I assume?)?

    My assumption is that people use Option 3?

    Photo Reward




    #2
    Whut?
    You need the diameter of whatever your perches are.

    small (2 1/4, etc) springs are specified in rate.

    As in, pounds required to compress them an inch in their linear band.

    I run 600 front/650 rear on the Pro3 car, with Koni dampers,
    but I'm slow. Dog slow.

    No helpers, no tenders, no sliders.

    fwiw,
    t
    now, sometimes I just mess with people. It's more entertaining that way. george graves

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by TobyB View Post
      Whut?
      You need the diameter of whatever your perches are.

      small (2 1/4, etc) springs are specified in rate.

      As in, pounds required to compress them an inch in their linear band.

      I run 600 front/650 rear on the Pro3 car, with Koni dampers,
      but I'm slow. Dog slow.

      No helpers, no tenders, no sliders.

      fwiw,
      t
      Perches are 62mm OD.
      I am asking if people remove the plastic perch and use 60mm ID, keep it and use 65mm ID but an un-snug fit, or use the 63.5mm equivalent.
      I'm assuming the many people running Swift Springs on BC Coilovers are using 63.5mm but wanted to confirm.

      Comment


        #4
        I don't know what the right answer is, but I'd probably go for the 63.5 and deal with them being loose.
        Originally posted by priapism
        My girl don't know shit, but she bakes a mean cupcake.
        Originally posted by shameson
        Usually it's best not to know how much money you have into your e30

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by TobyB View Post
          I run 600 front/650 rear on the Pro3 car, with Koni dampers,
          Is that a typical split for a tracked E30 these days? When I was putting my coilovers together it seemed the split was more often like mine - 450/650, due to the huge difference in motion ratio between front and rear.

          IG @turbovarg
          '91 318is, M20 turbo
          [CoTM: 4-18]
          '94 525iT slicktop, M50B30 + S362SX-E, 600WHP DD or bust
          - updated 3-17

          Comment


            #6
            I don't think it is- but it sorta works. 700 rear was too damn loose to
            tighten up any way any how. 650 is pretty good.

            jus' what I found, not what I know.

            t
            now, sometimes I just mess with people. It's more entertaining that way. george graves

            Comment


              #7
              Boom

              Went with 14k Rear and 12K Front.
              Car handles like an absolute dream!





              It also allowed be to have better control over camber in the rear, as even when static the 8k spring would compress too much.
              I now have -0.3 to -0.5degrees of camber in the rear, albeit as a less aesthetically pleasing ride height.



              Comment

              Working...
              X