Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Fitted the front Bilsteins on Sunday, but ran out of time to do the rears as I had to help the guys pack up for next weekend's interstate race meeting. So I have been driving it around for 3 days with the Bilsteins in the front and the worn out standard shocks in the rear. To enable some height adjustbility, I machined a few extra circlip grooves in the Bilstein shock bodies on the lathe on Saturday.

1903Bilsteins_Small.jpg

A comparison of the spring seat positions, this one proved ot be a little low so i went up one groove.

1903Front_Shocks_Comparo_Samll.jpg

I lowered the front 20 mm and it now sits around 10 mm lower in the front than the rear (measured at the sills). The front springs are 165 lbs per inch and have a lot of preload, necessary to hold up the considerable front end weight. This means spring compressors are essential.

1903FRont_Springs_with_Compressor_Small.jpg

I also had to shorten the bump stops to gain back the lost movement.

Bump_Stop_Standard_Triming_Small.jpg

The handling improvement is sure noticeable, it has a lot more front end grip, but the ride is very strange. The bouncing rear is a sharp contrast to the controlled front, and it is not comfortable. I think I have neck whiplash, so I will stick the rear Bilsteins in tonight, if time allows:cheers:

Edited by Sydneykid

I have a little ongoing test for the Stagea handling improvements. One of my heighbours has a Forrester GT manual (exhaust & boost), we both leave for work at similar times and travel the local winding road which has 15 corners in 1 km. When I first got the Stagea I couldn't keep up, he would gradually get away no matter how hard I pushed. When I put the stabiliser bars on I could just hang on, with a bit of effort. He was impressed. I upped the boost last week (to 0.7 bar) and I could then pull up to him on acceleration between the corners. This morning, with the Bilsteins in, he was slowing me up in some of the corners. He was mightly impressed.

Next week, if we meet up, I will have the rear Bilsteins in and the A/F ratios tuned, so I will lead for the first time and see if he can keep up.:(

While I was fitting the rear Bilsteins, I thought I would take some pictures of the rear suspension and show the camber and toe adjusters.

In this picture of the RHS rear suspension, the camber adjuster is on the inner end of the upper control arm and the toe adjuster is on the inner end of the tie rod. Note the yellow and white factory marks near the toe adjuster.

1903Rear_Suspension_Small1.jpg

This is closer shot of the LHS rear camber adjuster, it is is the mid position as shown by the hole being verticle. I wanted less negative camber as ours had almost 1 degree. Full adjustment brought that down to 0.25 degree. That should improve the rear tyre wear and increase the traction.

1903Camber_Adjuster_Small.jpg

Rotating the adjuster so that the hole (in the wide side of the washer) is towards the wheel means more negative camber. Rotating it so the hole is towards the diff means less negative camber. Having the hole on the bottom means that you get more change to negative camber as the rear end squats (under acceleration). Having the hole to the top means less change to negative camber as the rear end squats.

Hope that is of some help.:P

Edited by Sydneykid
Looks good SK,

How did everything go, did it improve the cars handling enough for you?  I hope you are pleased with the results.

Cheers

Gary

Hi Gary, yep the Bilsteins were a huge improvement over the standard shocks, that were also well past their use by date. I just have to add some more caster (adj radius rod bushes) and it will be perfect. We have a 1200 k run to do next weekend with a bit of a load in it, so that will test it out.

The fronts, being brand new, took a few days to settle in whereas the rears, being lightly used, were spot on straight away. For my purposes I don't think I would want to go much higher in the spring rate than standard. It already has 165 lbs per inch in the front, which is very high for a family waggon.

:D

I apologise if you've alraedy mentioned it. But where do buy a set of shocks like yours SK?

Hi burkey, I actually got this particular set from Gary, he only had them for few weeks, the fronts were brand new. I would usually buy Bilsteins from Heasmans, the Australian agents. UAS also sell them, and I think Autospeed are the agents for Heasmans in Tas, maybe check with them first. Prices do vary a bit, so shop around. PM me if you need more info.:rofl:

Hi burkey, I actually got this particular set from Gary, he only had them for few weeks, the fronts were brand new.  I would usually buy Bilsteins from Heasmans, the Australian agents.  UAS also sell them, and I think Autospeed are the agents for Heasmans in Tas, maybe check with them first.  Prices do vary a bit, so shop around.  PM me if you need more info.;)

Great Info SK

Went to a suspension guy in Thomastown in vic, he seems to think the konis are a

better shock than the bilsteins (he does a lot of skylines) for set & forget. He quoted around 1300 for all 4, is this a good price ??. I respect your opinion, and the advantage we have is that us lucky stagea owners can talk to some who obviously knows their stuff really well (ie SK), i dont want to be the first stagea owner with konis !!

thanks heaps

G'day SK,

Just on cutting the grooves into the shock body so you can do custom heights etc.. Do you have any close up's of the grooves? How deep are the grooves and are the spring seats that we see in the pics above the ones that come with the shocks ??

I'm just wondering if this is something anyone can do if they order a set of these shocks.

Cheers

J

michaeljquinn,

If you want my opinion, i have had both Koni's and Bilstiens and the Bilstiens were a better shock. They lasted longer, gave a better ride, and didn't have any problems. The Koni's i had one gave up the ghost about 3 months after install, they blew a seal and were no good. Although this only happened to one of the four i thought it was dissapointing. The replacement was not real quick in coming either.

Cheers

Gary

michaeljquinn,

If you would like some information. I have had both Koni's and Bilstiens in the past. I have better results with Bilstiens, more reliability with Bilstiens. The last set of Koni's i had didn't last long before one of the struts started to leak and therefore lose preasure.

Just my opinion, do withit what you will.

Cheers

Gary

G'day SK,

Just on cutting the grooves into the shock body so you can do custom heights etc..  Do you have any close up's of the grooves?  How deep are the grooves and are the spring seats that we see in the pics above the ones that come with the shocks ??

I'm just wondering if this is something anyone can do if they order a set of these shocks.

Cheers

J

Hi J, the circlip grooves are the same dimensions as the standard ones (1.5mm wide by 0.6 mm deep). The springs seats are the new generation, standard Bilstein ones. Most popular Bilsteins come with the alloy seats now.

If you have access to a lathe then you can easily do it, I am no machinist and it took me about an hour to do all 4. You do need to have the right tool for the job, being 1.5 mm wide. That is a common size, many piston rings are 1.5mm, so we had a couple in the machine shop. I know Whiteline will machine extra grooves if you buy the Bilsteins from them, they charge ~$100 or so for a full set of grooves on 4 shocks. I think Heasmans (the Australian Bilstein agents) do the same.

Hope that helps:cheers:

Great Info SK

Went to a suspension guy in Thomastown in vic, he seems to think the konis are a  

better shock than the bilsteins (he does a lot of skylines) for set & forget.  He quoted around 1300 for all 4, is this a good price ??.  I respect your opinion, and the advantage we have is that us lucky stagea owners can talk to some who obviously knows their stuff really well (ie SK), i dont want to be the first stagea owner with konis !!

thanks heaps

Hi Michael, I have/have had a large number of cars with Konis, personally I have never had a problem. One of our cars (not a Skyline) has Konis in it and they are fantastic. On that car (and ones like it), I would use Konis over Bilsteins every time.

But (there is always as but) Skylines are very heavy and the mono tube design of the Bilsteins gives a greater piston area than the Konis. This means better damping capacity, in that more oil goes through the valves for the same amount of suspension movement. Plus, being monotube, there is more oil inside the damper, so they don't overheat as quickly.

As usual, it boils down to horses for courses and the Bilstein design is simply better for a Skyline in my opinion. :D

PS; $1300 fitted with a four wheel alignment is an OK price, not fantastic but OK.

I have only had mine a few days now and I am already trying to work out the best way to get it setup to my liking. I have Tein HA coilovers in mine that are just a bit too hard and low for my liking with stock everything else. :headbang:

I have a Whiteline works kit on my R33 GTSt 4 door that is perfect. Not too hard not to soft, very comfortable, nice and low but not too low. It gives great feedback and makes the handling very predictable.

I would like to give the Stagea the same characteristics as my R33 as far as possible and use as many of the bits I have on the R33 as I can.

The GTSt kit uses BNF24Z 24mm front sway bar and BNR11Z 22mm rear sway bar VS the BNF27Z front and BNR11XZ rear for the GTR and recommended by SK. As far as I can tell they are both exactly the same dimensions but the GTR bars have Z for heavy duty in the part number, I am guessing they are just made out of a slightly stiffer material.

Am I correct in this assumption and will the GTS bars be adequate on the Stagea if set on their stiffest setting?

Will the valuing in the rear R33 GTSt Bilstens be suitable in the Stagea if used with the appropriately harder spring weight and what should this spring weight be?

Can the front R33 GTSt Bilstens be made to fit in the Stagea and will their valving be suitable if used with Whitline GTR springs?

Its probably not worth swapping the caster and camber bushes over so I will probably just get a new front caster kit and rear camber kit then an alignment and I should be right.

If I am unable to get the Bilstens to fit or their valving is not suitable for the additional weight and higher spring weights of the Stagea what spring weights should I get to fit to the Teni coilovers? Or will increasing their height also make them softer?

My main complaint about the Stagea is the excessively light steering and the lack of feel and feedback it gives. Not only is it too light it does not seem to self center as well as the skyline.

Does the Stagea run a different steering rack etc or is this feel just given by its lack of castor and bigger steering wheel. Will a caster kit or adjustable caster bars fix this or is more required?

Quite few questions there Burns, I will try and snwer them...

Mine has the 24 mm adjustable front bar and 22 mm adjustable rear bar. The Whiteline codes;

B = stabiliser bar

N = Nissan

F = Front

R = Rear

X = heavy duty

XX = extra heavy duty

Z = adjustable

The diameter of the bar determines the rate, the material they are made off is all exactly the same (good quality Australian spring steel).

The R33GTST rear Bilsteins seem to be perfectly OK on the Stagea. The front Bilsteins on mine are R33GTR, I don't think the R33GTST Bilsteins will handle the extra weight and spring rate of the Stagea. Give Heasmans a call and talk to Allan, they have valving specs and may be able to clarify.

The Stagea rear springs are unique in free height and rate. I don't think R33GTST or GTR would be suitable. The front springs are the same as R33GTR, R33GTST springs are too soft and short and can't handle the weight.

Extra caster makes a heap of difference, like a GTR, Stageas (being 4wd) have a different front subframe and location to GTST's (being 2wd). Due to drive shaft angles they don't have the same amount of caster as a GTST. Adjustable caster bushes are an inexpensive and good solution. They do make big difference in both static (on the wheel aligner) and dynamic (the bushes don't deform as much) caster.

I was able to take out the excessive rear camber with the standard adjusters (refer previously posted pictures), but mine is only lowered to 365 mm (centre of wheeel to guard). If you go more than that, you will most likely need at least one set of rear adjustable upper control arm bushes.

I hope that answered all of your questions:cheers:

Thanks SK I think that covered most of it.

Mine is sitting at 325mm rear and 340mm front with the rear camber adjusters as far out as they can go.

I think I will adjust it to 345mm front and rear (The same hight as the Whiteline GTSt kit).

What way do you need to wind the adjusters to make it higher up or down on the shock body? and will adjusting them to sit higher make it any softer?

What way do you turn the damper adjuster clickers on the top of the coilovers to increase and decrees dampening?

I think I will try to get the Teni’s working for me if I can before lashing out for Bilsteins.

1246RIMG0808.JPG

Thanks SK I think that covered most of it.  

Mine is sitting at 325mm rear and 340mm front with the rear camber adjusters as far out as they can go.

I think I will adjust it to 345mm front and rear (The same hight as the Whiteline GTSt  kit).  

That's still pretty low for a 1650 kg waggon.

What way do you need to wind the adjusters  to make it higher up or down on the shock body? and will adjusting them to sit higher make it any softer?

Anticlockwise winds up the bottom spring seats and raises the car.

What way do you turn the damper adjuster clickers on the top of the coilovers to increase and decrees dampening?  

Clockwise is harder.

I think I will try to get the Teni’s working for me if I can before lashing out for Bilsteins.

The Tein shocks are usually not too bad, but the spring rates are way too high.

Hope that helps:cheers:

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • I sense an out of control build thread coming up lololol. That 450kW goal will end up being 600 to 700kW LOL.
    • Nice, thanks for sharing your progress....that's a pretty long list you are putting into it!
    • Decided to upgrade my pressurised plastic coolant expansion tank for a fancy pants alloy version The OEM versions can get brittle, even the new plastic one I got when I first got the car is a starting to show signs of "stress" I wasn't cheap, but it is basically unbreakable
    • Morning all, I have an RB25DET Neo that's in need of a rebuild. Will need new pistons etc due to detonation damage. Would anyone be able to recommend a shop in Southeast Queensland who I could bring my long motor to for a rebuild? Just want someone who knows RBs and whos built a bunch of them before. TLDR - recommended engine shops for RB rebuild.
    • Gday Thought it was about time I started a build thread! As expected this project has snowballed into a huge financial liability, but unless you’re strong willed and responsible, it’s not a surprise. Background -  My first turbo car was an R32 GTS-4, got my full license and then totalled my Au Falcon a week later, so while trying to sell my RMZ450 dirtbike to buy another car a bloke offered to swap the R32 which at the time I felt like I was ripped off but looking back and seeing prices of those now ($40kish) it was a good deal, I didn’t know enough about these cars to appreciate what I had so sold it before the RB20 blew up. Between here and there, out of 12 cars I’ve owned the note worthy ones are a V8 Lexus SC400 (soarer), a couple of XR6 Turbos and my beloved S15 which I had for about 3 years, picked it up for $12500, repairable write off but she was fine, gun metal grey/pewter and bone stock/unmolested until I got my hands on it. Ended up spending about the value of the car and 280kw, 2 demerit points by the time I got defected and sold it for $14500 (also $40kish in today’s market, rip) Fast forward to the present day, I’m in a much better position financially and daily an MQ Triton (great cars, pipe down Ranger Bois), I cruised marketplace and car sales for a few months looking for another R32, the best deal I could find was an absolute rust bucket half finished project for $12000, until this R33 popped up in Port Macquarie for $18k - unregistered and barely running but decent shape, kept an eye on it for a few weeks and the price steadily dropped, $16k then $15k then $14k, that was the point where I was like shit someone’s gonna snatch this up! It was owned by a young bloke who had big plans but him and his missus just had a baby so smartest move financially for them but big gain for me. So 2 days later I’m towing a car trailer to pick this thing up. Roughly 2 weeks and $3500 later I’m cruising around Newcastle in my beat up R33 all smiles and dose noises! It only needed some basic shit to get it going, coil packs and air flow meter, electrical stuff and all fluids changed, 158k kms and running pretty good, nice smooth engine after oil and coolant flush - when I say coolant I mean it had been filled up with tap water, every gallery and heater element was filled with rust, 8-9 flushes later and still had brown liquid coming out but she’ll be right. The car was painted R34 Bayside Blue at some point but whether it was a cheap job or just not looked after is anyone’s guess, clear coat flaking like sausage roll.  Was rethinking my choices and contemplating life, had it up for sale for $22k - still cheaper than any registered R33 but got little interest, next minute I had an opportunity at work - 6 months overseas for good money, so that was a no brainer, fast forward again and here we are with a 50% finished project. Current Mods - 200ish KW according to butt dyno Was tuned with Apexi PowerFC EBC (old school Greddy Profec)  Stock turbo (more shaft play than a Tinder date gone right) 3inch turbo back Varex muffler  Aftermarket injectors of mystery size, Power FC showed 36% duty cycle at full boost so not behd good size Someone had good intentions but stuck with the stock R33 MAF so we had misfires at 6000rpm due to the MAF hitting 5.2V So far I’ve redone the entire interior with carpet form Car Mats Direct, new Seats and steering wheel from Autotechnica, also sound system by Autobarn (mainly Kicker) Also MCA pro comfort coil overs - Hands down best purchase yet, worlds of improvement over the tired 30yrold shocks Goals - 450kw/600hp on flex tune New paint job - Midnight Purple 2 Engine is at the shop getting rebuilt with forged rods a pistons, new valves and springs, ATI Harmonic balancer, Aeroflow 7.5L sump, rear head drain and oil restrictors as per oil control thread* and cam covers modded for larger breathers, other stuff I can’t recall of the top of my head Parts purchased and to be installed once the engine is done -  Engine loom from Wiring Specialties including these options: Haltech Nexus S3 R35 Coil pack conversion  PRP Dual Trigger kit Fan controller  Other Parts -  262 Kelford Cams Turbo - Hypergear ATR43SS3-ProS with T51R mod (whistly boi) 6 boost manifold (high mount) 50mm Turbosmart Pro gate (plumbed back for legal reasons) HKS Super Turbo Exhaust with High Flow Cat Custom 3.5inch dump and front pipe 1500cc Bosch injectors  Fuel Pump walbro 525 Haltech MAP and IAT sensors Haltech Flex Sensor Fenix Radiator with dual thermo fans LS1 Alternator Kit Oil Filter Relocation from EFI solutions and Cooling pro oil cooler Many other things sitting in my garage waiting for that engine to come back. Progress pics to follow -  
×
×
  • Create New...