Norm Peterson
corner barstool sitter
I don't see any major problems concerning the bumpstops - though shorter bumpstops will let the car travel just as far into 'bump' as it did with the aftermarket springs - IOW, if you hit the bumpstops now with 2" of ground clearance, you'll still be down to 2" when you hit them from OE ride height. It'll just take more bump travel to get there, maybe a bigger bump or a deeper hole.Is there any problem with leaving everything on but changing back to factory springs? Mostly do not know if roll center correction kit and bumpstops would cause any issues.
The RC correction (and the related bumpsteer correction) kits are a different situation. Back up at OE ride height, the RC correction kit would drive the front geo roll center upward above its OE location (probably by 2 or 3 inches or so). This would be the understeerish effect. But you'd have slightly more aggressive camber gain opposing that, so the net result of these two might be a wash at steady-state. I think it'd be the transient handling 'feel' that'd change . . . maybe a lower rate of progression toward understeer during the very early part of cornering when the car is actually in the process of rolling but hasn't finished rolled over to where it's going to get.
If you remove the RC kit, you should either remove the bumpsteer kit or at minimum plan on resetting it. Assuming that it can be adjusted that far (I have no idea whether it can or not, but it's definitely something to keep in mind here). Moving the ride height back up moves you upward along the bumpsteer curve, where the same setting won't be correct any more.
Norm
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