Stacy wrote:Joe,
A few questions for you;
What binding are you referring to?
Why do you think poly bushing the Watts Link is a no-no?
Have the shocks and springs you fitted lowered the cars ride height front/rear?
All the best,
Stacy
Joe428 wrote:
I've read that the poly bushings in the watts causes binding in other posts on various forums. I haven't felt anything abnormal but I've only driven it on the street. I used Racing Beat springs and KYB shocks. The KYB shocks are basically stock valving. They are much better that the original ones that were on there but they will be relaced with Tokico ones once the supplier issues are resolved. The springs are supposed to lower the car about 1". The front seems lower but the rear looks higher in comparison. I didn't measure the car before and after so "looks" is relative.
Again, thank you everyone for the help.
I wouldn't worry about watts link binding. Always dangerous looking for technical knowledge on Internet forums - I've seen the rx8 owners club forum.
Binding is possible in roll but it's the short angled top links, not the watts link. The trick is just to poly bush everything apart from the inner joints on the short links. In reality though you end up just tightening the rear roll until you never get to the point of binding.
As Tool said. The watts link provides the lateral support for the axle. It's superior to the panhard rod set up because primarily the assembly marks out an almost straight line vertically through suspension travel, whereas the panhard rod naturally traces an arc. So what you need to ensure is that the arms are horizontal at your ride height. If you have altered ride height from stock substantially then that's a job at the mounting points rather than the link assembly itself. It doesn't sound like you have really.
As the Watts Link traces a largely straight line whereas a panhard rod doesn't I don't think dropping an inch will offset the axle much from stock..
If you want adjustment get some dampers with adjustable platforms - Gaz maybe.