ohlins
#2
A few ballers here have the TTX setup, which I'm sure is amazing, but too rich for my blood.
#3
Hi for sure dfv but here in italy they has same price of 3way moton or other setup like kw.
I think also i can change my gt3 with a .2rs in next 6 months and i'd like use setup also.
I think one way is better for find the correct setup. Have you the performance increase in second with this dfv compare to stock? Why you change the spring on this Ohlins ?
I think also i can change my gt3 with a .2rs in next 6 months and i'd like use setup also.
I think one way is better for find the correct setup. Have you the performance increase in second with this dfv compare to stock? Why you change the spring on this Ohlins ?
#4
99% of folks can't tune the dampers correctly. whether it's lack of expertise on track or lack of a chassis dyno or proper budget. In my view the single adjustable or non-adjustable dampers would be better suited. Ohlins TTX is way too expensive and good for my abilities, if i were to upgrade I would be going for bilsteins or the DFV ohlins.
are swift springs stiffer? what's the rating?
are swift springs stiffer? what's the rating?
#5
Which setup, TTX or DFV (road and track)? Spyerx has the DFV, and I am having the same setup installed next week. Ohlins just lowered the price on the DFV setup, $3100 for a fantastic single adjustable shock. Good dual purpose spring rates of 500/800#, although I recommend swapping to Swift springs.
A few ballers here have the TTX setup, which I'm sure is amazing, but too rich for my blood.
A few ballers here have the TTX setup, which I'm sure is amazing, but too rich for my blood.
#6
Yes the problem is find right setting . When i use race car i have my team with engeneer and dima and everythink on road car you must find the correct balance for road ,track .rain .sun ecc and you must change setting in 10 minutes and he quality of hardwere must be the must. My ask is if ohlins are better quality rhan others
#7
I have have the DFV. The TTX are great, super-high quality engineering, and in addition to being multi adjustable the adjustment ***** are accessible easily from wheel well. They are also expensive and the spring rates they come with stock are really aggressive for the street (they are more for track than track/street), and for me, they provide too many variables to tweak. I'm not racing, just canyons and HPDE.
The single adjustable Ohlin DFV, I have a 550/700 springs (IIRC) and are single adjustable, shop set them up, I don't touch them. The adjustment ***** are not as easy to get to, on the fronts you an turn wheel full lock and get to the **** on the bottom of the shock, under the wheel carrier. On the rear its on top of shock, which means you need to reach through the scaffolding in the back to get to them. Bit of a PITA. I do like my suspension setup the way it is, car is so much better (for me) than stock.
Marco, you mention racing... so I'd go with what your shop/team suggest and know, and can get easily serviced. Ohlin are great shocks, there are others too.
USC: The only shocks I'm aware of that keep the PASM is the clubsports. Don't know how they compare other than shop suspension guy was lukewarm on them compared to Ohilin.
The single adjustable Ohlin DFV, I have a 550/700 springs (IIRC) and are single adjustable, shop set them up, I don't touch them. The adjustment ***** are not as easy to get to, on the fronts you an turn wheel full lock and get to the **** on the bottom of the shock, under the wheel carrier. On the rear its on top of shock, which means you need to reach through the scaffolding in the back to get to them. Bit of a PITA. I do like my suspension setup the way it is, car is so much better (for me) than stock.
Marco, you mention racing... so I'd go with what your shop/team suggest and know, and can get easily serviced. Ohlin are great shocks, there are others too.
USC: The only shocks I'm aware of that keep the PASM is the clubsports. Don't know how they compare other than shop suspension guy was lukewarm on them compared to Ohilin.
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#9
I have have the DFV. The TTX are great, super-high quality engineering, and in addition to being multi adjustable the adjustment ***** are accessible easily from wheel well. They are also expensive and the spring rates they come with stock are really aggressive for the street (they are more for track than track/street), and for me, they provide too many variables to tweak. I'm not racing, just canyons and HPDE.
The single adjustable Ohlin DFV, I have a 550/700 springs (IIRC) and are single adjustable, shop set them up, I don't touch them. The adjustment ***** are not as easy to get to, on the fronts you an turn wheel full lock and get to the **** on the bottom of the shock, under the wheel carrier. On the rear its on top of shock, which means you need to reach through the scaffolding in the back to get to them. Bit of a PITA. I do like my suspension setup the way it is, car is so much better (for me) than stock.
Marco, you mention racing... so I'd go with what your shop/team suggest and know, and can get easily serviced. Ohlin are great shocks, there are others too.
USC: The only shocks I'm aware of that keep the PASM is the clubsports. Don't know how they compare other than shop suspension guy was lukewarm on them compared to Ohilin.
The single adjustable Ohlin DFV, I have a 550/700 springs (IIRC) and are single adjustable, shop set them up, I don't touch them. The adjustment ***** are not as easy to get to, on the fronts you an turn wheel full lock and get to the **** on the bottom of the shock, under the wheel carrier. On the rear its on top of shock, which means you need to reach through the scaffolding in the back to get to them. Bit of a PITA. I do like my suspension setup the way it is, car is so much better (for me) than stock.
Marco, you mention racing... so I'd go with what your shop/team suggest and know, and can get easily serviced. Ohlin are great shocks, there are others too.
USC: The only shocks I'm aware of that keep the PASM is the clubsports. Don't know how they compare other than shop suspension guy was lukewarm on them compared to Ohilin.
#10
#15
I'm getting the R&T DFV for an E46 M3...heard really good reviews about the system, and a friend who swears by them, just bought one for a 997.2 Turbo...which disables PASM. From what I understand, the DFV is what makes it have its dual personality that is needed on the street and track. You can adjust it to be stiff, but when the road becomes rough, the DFV opens up and allows the shock to respond quicker, and stops your tires from hopping and losing grip.