decodeddiesel
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Wes
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2021
- Threads
- 8
- Messages
- 798
- Reaction score
- 1,085
- Location
- Southern New England
- Car(s)
- 2020 Supra, 2016 VW Tiguan, 2007 Cayman
- Thread starter
- #226
I don't have any lap times to back up my decision to add sway bars to my car. What I did consider was several expert opinions both on and off of the forum, as well as photographic evidence that showed my car has significant body roll. The Cusco sway bars are a very mild upgrade and I'm happy with them. It's common knowledge that OEMs set-up cars to understeer at the limit and sway bars are a common fix.I get the feel aspect. A flat car was feels better and more responsive.
My experience has been that sometimes a flatter car results in unless grip. Instead of letting the car be compliant and hunker down, I may find the car skipping across bumps or otherwise putting too much stress on the tires.
I 100% noticed faster tire wear, but I don't mind that as long as it means the cars working better.
So, I was just wondering the reasoning behind the sway bars. Just wondering if it was a case of throwing them on because it seemed like the right thing to do or if there was some math/lap times behind it.
I have never, ever thrown a part on my car unless I can confirm it was going to make it better. That's why I ask so many questions.
I have certainly made the mistake of going overboard with sway bars and stiffer springs in the past (my STi when I upgraded to KW Clubsports for Auto-X), but the Supra doesn't feel anything like that.
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