Originally posted by eacmen
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Ohlins R&T Strut Failure
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Originally posted by Thoglan View Post
I wouldn't consider this a mark against the ohlins, this was install error and something that in hindsight I should have been more aware of. I will likely pair with a different set of camber plates or turn down the top nuts on the lathe to ensure the nyloc is engaged properly. I believe the turner street plates are common to run with ohlins.
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I would get a standard height hex nut and a Nord-Lock washer underneath it. Or... locktite that bitch in there.
The strut itself is pretty burnished - it could be bent. I would disassemble it and check the tube for straightness by rolling it on a flat plate (granite or glass). I think these are only lubricated with grease so it could probably use a rebuild anyway.
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Originally posted by Thoglan View Post
I was just gonna turn down the nut on the lathe so that it better engaged the nyloc, or buy different camber plates
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Originally posted by eacmen View Post
Its close but they both are engaged.
In a different thread someone had posted an idea of using a belleville conical lock washer on the diff bolt. This might be another good application for that style lock washer.
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Originally posted by zzyzx85 View Post
it looks like the nylon is barely engaged 😬
In a different thread someone had posted an idea of using a belleville conical lock washer on the diff bolt. This might be another good application for that style lock washer.
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Thoglan, let me know if you do not have the Ohlins instructions. I cant take pictures and upload them.
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Not sure if it helps but these are the Ohlin r&t kit with vorshlag plates. I didn’t assemble or install them, they came with the car.
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Originally posted by R1pilot View PostThis is going to be hard to explain, but the GC plates have a sleeve that has quite a bug chamfer to accommodate a similar feature on the factory strut shaft I presume. The Ohlins on the other hand have a straight shoulder stepdown … the chamfer on the sleeve sits on that square stepdown.
I noticed this the second time I took them apart, so I never really paid attn to the factory struts before I threw them away.
My point is maybe the previous owner used a washer there and its pushing the strut up?
I completely disassembled the camber plates to see what could be wrong or whether they would come apart if the bearing failed as I was pretty paranoid, so I took pictures of every part. Here is the chamfer on the insert.
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This is going to be hard to explain, but the GC plates have a sleeve that has quite a bug chamfer to accommodate a similar feature on the factory strut shaft I presume. The Ohlins on the other hand have a straight shoulder stepdown … the chamfer on the sleeve sits on that square stepdown.
I noticed this the second time I took them apart, so I never really paid attn to the factory struts before I threw them away.
My point is maybe the previous owner used a washer there and its pushing the strut up?
I completely disassembled the camber plates to see what could be wrong or whether they would come apart if the bearing failed as I was pretty paranoid, so I took pictures of every part. Here is the chamfer on the insert.
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Hmm, looking at that makes mine look quite suspect. I'm not at home at the moment so don't have them on hand but perhaps there is a shim or something in mine that is not supposed to be there. Important to note I didn't actually install the ohlins/camber plates, they were installed by the previous owner and I hadn't touched them until now.
I think I am probably going to go the turner street camber plate route anyway. Mine are a few years old and done ~30,000km. My dampers were probably due for a refresh as well. Will do all the front bushings and convert to flat ride while everything is apart since I was looking for a reason to do that.Last edited by Thoglan; 03-10-2022, 01:53 PM.
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Here is a picture of mine. I torqued the bolt to spec according to Ohlins’ instructions and marked the nut/shaft. I then proceeded to give it a quick extra bump with the impact to make sure, you can see the line doesn’t line up due to the extra torquing.3 Photos
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