Any Experience w/KW Coilovers ???
#2
Rennlist Member
I have them and love them.
I was trying to decide between KWv3s and either the Moton CS/JRZ stuff...
For my uses I could not justify the costs of the Moton/JRZ.... yet
So I have done two track days with the KWv3s and think they are great... the shop I got them at installed, lowered, aligned and corner balanced the car. Night and day difference compared to stock.
I would highly reccomend them BUT I do not have much to compare them to... just the stock ones...
I called Rennworx and inquired about the Manthey Custom Valved KWs as well and again, could not justifiy the cost for my uses.
I have yet to adjust the ones on my car -- they are great on the track and I am not doing a lot of street driving so I do not mess with them -- they are not bad on the street either though...
Essentially the advice I was given when it came to motons and KWs --
do you trailer to the track or drive?
I drive
do you run slicks?
no, MPSCups
given your limited experience (6 days of track driving prior to installation) do you think you would know what to do with all the adjustments on the Motons? probably not yet... beyond firmer for track and softer for street I would rely on pros to help set up the car...
Are motons in the future... I cannot say that as of today my speed is limited by the KWs... So I will spend the money on driver improvment
Am I glad I did it and would I do it over -- yes
I was trying to decide between KWv3s and either the Moton CS/JRZ stuff...
For my uses I could not justify the costs of the Moton/JRZ.... yet
So I have done two track days with the KWv3s and think they are great... the shop I got them at installed, lowered, aligned and corner balanced the car. Night and day difference compared to stock.
I would highly reccomend them BUT I do not have much to compare them to... just the stock ones...
I called Rennworx and inquired about the Manthey Custom Valved KWs as well and again, could not justifiy the cost for my uses.
I have yet to adjust the ones on my car -- they are great on the track and I am not doing a lot of street driving so I do not mess with them -- they are not bad on the street either though...
Essentially the advice I was given when it came to motons and KWs --
do you trailer to the track or drive?
I drive
do you run slicks?
no, MPSCups
given your limited experience (6 days of track driving prior to installation) do you think you would know what to do with all the adjustments on the Motons? probably not yet... beyond firmer for track and softer for street I would rely on pros to help set up the car...
Are motons in the future... I cannot say that as of today my speed is limited by the KWs... So I will spend the money on driver improvment
Am I glad I did it and would I do it over -- yes
#3
Race Car
I've got the H&R RSS Clubsports on my regular 996. I picked them as they provided the increased spring rate that I wanted without too much to fiddle with that will allow me to work on the nut behind the wheel. I'm very happy with the H&R RSS Clubsports BUT this should not be a consideration on your list. You've already got a hight-only adjustable coilover on the car...if you're not going to an bump / rebound adjustable setup simply re-spring and re-valve what you've already got as a cheaper solution. The damper in the GT3 is very comparable to what's used in the H&R Clubsport coilover.
#4
Nordschleife Master
You already have H&R springs on the car. For dampers adjustable would be the way to go for a GT3. Depending on your shop and local guys setting are pretty easy to come by. My suspension guy provides you with a booklet with setting for different tracks for wet, dry, and AutoX wet and dry. He happens to be the engineer for Alex Jobs racing. He does this for JRZ and Motons but I am sure you will be able to find the right shop and friends. Good luck
#5
This is not for a GT3....should have mentioned that. I currently have Bilstein HD's and Eibachs...so anyting is going to be a huge advancement. The H&Rs come w/camber plates and monoballs which is pretty trick..just worried that will be too stiff for street. KW's are getting good reviews and I understand are now the #1 choice in Europe over Bilstein and H&R....in fact I understand the founders of KW are engineers from Bilstein or H&R...go figure.
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#8
Nordschleife Master
looking at the avatar: are you in LA and is it fir a 964? If you are in LA give Joey at BBIautosport a call. He is in Huntington Beach and used to be with white lightning when they had Porsches. They did run KW and I have heard good things about performance and price.
#9
I run the Manthey KWs which are revalved KW3, and I also run with monoball tops.
For a mixed road/track car they are simply superb.
For a mixed road/track car they are simply superb.
Last edited by zoomzoom; 05-23-2008 at 08:34 PM.
#11
LOL, yeah Manthey fitted them for me.
But for something as fundamental as suspension on the GT3, I don't see the point in messing around with generic solutions. I don't know of any uprated suspension that has been tested as much as the MMKWs, specifically for the GT3 and which benefit from the substantial quality of KW. I think they are worth the premium over similar generic suspension kits.
There are certainly more sophisticated 4-way suspension kits out there (JRZ/Moton/Intrax etc), but for a road+track car I don't see the point. If I were racing, had logging and telemetry, and drove the car constantly at 10/10ths week in week out, then 4-ways may make sense but until then... no.
As it is, one of the Supercup drivers (Sean Edwards - quali P4 for this weekend's Monaco Supercup) reckons my car is the best setup 996GT3 he has ever driven - and I take that as a vote of confidence considering my car doesn't have the latest/fandabadoo-4-way-titanium suspension jobbies
But for something as fundamental as suspension on the GT3, I don't see the point in messing around with generic solutions. I don't know of any uprated suspension that has been tested as much as the MMKWs, specifically for the GT3 and which benefit from the substantial quality of KW. I think they are worth the premium over similar generic suspension kits.
There are certainly more sophisticated 4-way suspension kits out there (JRZ/Moton/Intrax etc), but for a road+track car I don't see the point. If I were racing, had logging and telemetry, and drove the car constantly at 10/10ths week in week out, then 4-ways may make sense but until then... no.
As it is, one of the Supercup drivers (Sean Edwards - quali P4 for this weekend's Monaco Supercup) reckons my car is the best setup 996GT3 he has ever driven - and I take that as a vote of confidence considering my car doesn't have the latest/fandabadoo-4-way-titanium suspension jobbies
#12
Rennlist Member
LOL, yeah Manthey fitted them for me.
But for something as fundamental as suspension on the GT3, I don't see the point in messing around with generic solutions. I don't know of any uprated suspension that has been tested as much as the MMKWs, specifically for the GT3 and which benefit from the substantial quality of KW. I think they are worth the premium over similar generic suspension kits.
There are certainly more sophisticated 4-way suspension kits out there (JRZ/Moton/Intrax etc), but for a road+track car I don't see the point. If I were racing, had logging and telemetry, and drove the car constantly at 10/10ths week in week out, then 4-ways may make sense but until then... no.
As it is, one of the Supercup drivers (Sean Edwards - quali P4 for this weekend's Monaco Supercup) reckons my car is the best setup 996GT3 he has ever driven - and I take that as a vote of confidence considering my car doesn't have the latest/fandabadoo-4-way-titanium suspension jobbies
But for something as fundamental as suspension on the GT3, I don't see the point in messing around with generic solutions. I don't know of any uprated suspension that has been tested as much as the MMKWs, specifically for the GT3 and which benefit from the substantial quality of KW. I think they are worth the premium over similar generic suspension kits.
There are certainly more sophisticated 4-way suspension kits out there (JRZ/Moton/Intrax etc), but for a road+track car I don't see the point. If I were racing, had logging and telemetry, and drove the car constantly at 10/10ths week in week out, then 4-ways may make sense but until then... no.
As it is, one of the Supercup drivers (Sean Edwards - quali P4 for this weekend's Monaco Supercup) reckons my car is the best setup 996GT3 he has ever driven - and I take that as a vote of confidence considering my car doesn't have the latest/fandabadoo-4-way-titanium suspension jobbies
FWIW --
KWv3s are around $3000-3500 depending on where you get them...
manthey KWv3s were $5000 when I checked on them a while back
#13
LOL, yeah Manthey fitted them for me.
As it is, one of the Supercup drivers (Sean Edwards - quali P4 for this weekend's Monaco Supercup) reckons my car is the best setup 996GT3 he has ever driven - and I take that as a vote of confidence considering my car doesn't have the latest/fandabadoo-4-way-titanium suspension jobbies
As it is, one of the Supercup drivers (Sean Edwards - quali P4 for this weekend's Monaco Supercup) reckons my car is the best setup 996GT3 he has ever driven - and I take that as a vote of confidence considering my car doesn't have the latest/fandabadoo-4-way-titanium suspension jobbies
I have the MMKW's and rate them highly. Even though the spring rate is higher than stock you'd never know it.
#14
Three Wheelin'
I think KWs are good for the money. I've gone for intrax 4 ways though as they were the only dampers I've found that I was confident would not only be better on track, but also better on road. Twice as much as KWs though, so not in direct competition if money is a consideration.
#15
Recently fitted Manthey KWs prior to doing Nurburgring and Spa this month and can only say they are superb. They give enough adjustment and deliver feel that gives a confidence that stock cannot provide.