Originally posted by Epsilon
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Coil over Adjustments
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Words of advice:
1. Unbolt sway bar from end links while adjusting the ride height. Once desired height is reached re-attach the sway bar to the end links.
2. Make sure when you are adjusting ride height that the parking brake is off.
3. Make adjustments, ride around a fair amount preferably on a bumpy surface, then measure. Some guys will slam the car to the ground when lowering it from a floor jack to get the car settled. Seems dangerous to me.
4. Measure on a known flat surface (like a gas station).
5. Mark painters tape and put on the fender and the wheel to mark where you are measuring from to make sure its consistent. I have found that I am much more consistent with a yardstick than a tape measure fwiw.
6. Weigh yourself, then put the same weight in ballast in the drivers seat when doing the measurements. Water jugs work well. Or old brake rotors dont need to get too crazy with precision just want to get it in the ballpark. Also make sure car is empty of other ballast that would cause it to be lop-sided.
Hope one of the above helps.
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Originally posted by Obioban View Post
I assume only on the rear-- no?
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Originally posted by eacmen View PostWords of advice:
1. Unbolt sway bar from end links while adjusting the ride height. Once desired height is reached re-attach the sway bar to the end links.
2. Make sure when you are adjusting ride height that the parking brake is off.
3. Make adjustments, ride around a fair amount preferably on a bumpy surface, then measure. Some guys will slam the car to the ground when lowering it from a floor jack to get the car settled. Seems dangerous to me.
4. Measure on a known flat surface (like a gas station).
5. Mark painters tape and put on the fender and the wheel to mark where you are measuring from to make sure its consistent. I have found that I am much more consistent with a yardstick than a tape measure fwiw.
6. Weigh yourself, then put the same weight in ballast in the drivers seat when doing the measurements. Water jugs work well. Or old brake rotors dont need to get too crazy with precision just want to get it in the ballpark. Also make sure car is empty of other ballast that would cause it to be lop-sided.
Hope one of the above helps.
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Originally posted by YaroM3 View Post
The fronts you can adjust them with out messing pre load. You set the pre load before you install the coils. In the rear is different because you have a spring and shock instead of it all being one unit. (True coilover) as some call it.
2005 IR/IR M3 Coupe
2012 LMB/Black 128i
2008 Black/Black M5 Sedan
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Originally posted by Obioban View Post
How do you change preload without changing ride height up front? Does the shock mounting position changing?
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Originally posted by eacmen View PostWords of advice:
1. Unbolt sway bar from end links while adjusting the ride height. Once desired height is reached re-attach the sway bar to the end links.
2. Make sure when you are adjusting ride height that the parking brake is off.
3. Make adjustments, ride around a fair amount preferably on a bumpy surface, then measure. Some guys will slam the car to the ground when lowering it from a floor jack to get the car settled. Seems dangerous to me.
4. Measure on a known flat surface (like a gas station).
5. Mark painters tape and put on the fender and the wheel to mark where you are measuring from to make sure its consistent. I have found that I am much more consistent with a yardstick than a tape measure fwiw.
6. Weigh yourself, then put the same weight in ballast in the drivers seat when doing the measurements. Water jugs work well. Or old brake rotors dont need to get too crazy with precision just want to get it in the ballpark. Also make sure car is empty of other ballast that would cause it to be lop-sided.
Hope one of the above helps.
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Originally posted by pb_e46 View Post
I recommend all of this as well as checking your preload setting, The only point I didn't see people mention is that fact that sometimes (a lot of the time with E46 swiss cheese chassis) that it's not even. Lots of my friends and myself have had to adjust our coils to non-symmetrical measurements to achieve the same gap. If you can't get it with the aforementioned, just adjust it to match.
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Originally posted by speedster View PostFor what it's worth I also have BC's and my left rear sits a bit lower than the passenger side. I've adjusted the height on several occasions but it seems like the driver's side always sits a bit lower
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