GrabberBlue
Well-Known Member
Black redline struts on my car, pulled the stickers and they look factory. If you want to be extra, some owners have had Ford Performance or Shelby stickers made for them.
Sponsored
Drilling into my car to me is huge. If it isnāt to you thatās 100% acceptable. I did also mention it was just in the rubber piece.Donāt be so dramatic dude, itās a slot in the plastic battery cover. Not what most would refer to as āhuge differenceā
The difference in those options is all appearance. The shock is the same on all of them.
Do you have a pic? Wondering how that Carbon Fiber looks. I do wish they would hurry up and get performance blue as an option.Ordered the MRT carbon fiber edition. Should be here Tuesday.
Installed and removed the next day. Here is why: hood would not align properly on passenger side no matter how much I attempted to adjust the hood. A few other things that caught my attention; they are carbon dipped, not real carbon fiber, and the hood did not raise that high with them. They do install easy as stated, but it was a little frustrating not getting the passenger side hood aligned after install. Went back to the hood prop....will see if I can get either a Ford Performance or Redline hood strut at Mustang Week next week. Ran out of time to mess with it. I will probably bring it to Mustang Week and sell it to anyone for a reduced price.Do you have a pic? Wondering how that Carbon Fiber looks. I do wish they would hurry up and get performance blue as an option.
Thanks for that info. Do the Ford Performance ones work on the GT350's? I thought there was some debate on that, but those are the ones I really want.Installed and removed the next day. Here is why: hood would not align properly on passenger side no matter how much I attempted to adjust the hood. A few other things that caught my attention; they are carbon dipped, not real carbon fiber, and the hood did not raise that high with them. They do install easy as stated, but it was a little frustrating not getting the passenger side hood aligned after install. Went back to the hood prop....will see if I can get either a Ford Performance or Redline hood strut at Mustang Week next week. Ran out of time to mess with it. I will probably bring it to Mustang Week and sell it to anyone for a reduced price.
Your welcome, and I think your right about the FP struts for GT350..,donāt see any from FP that is made for GT350 specifically, for others, GT, Ecoboost, sure. So, looks like Redline is probably one of the few choices.Thanks for that info. Do the Ford Performance ones work on the GT350's? I thought there was some debate on that, but those are the ones I really want.
https://www.cjponyparts.com/ford-ra...nce-logo-v6-ecoboost-gt-2015-2019/p/M16826MA/
Yeah, thats a bummer. I guess I can buy them then take off the sticker. Honestly, cutting the hole in the side will bother me too, bc I just bought this thing, and it was expensive!! lolYour welcome, and I think your right about the FP struts for GT350..,donāt see any from FP that is made for GT350 specifically, for others, GT, Ecoboost, sure. So, looks like Redline is probably one of the few choices.
Iām curious why you were trying to align the hood in the first place? Iām not familiar with the brand of shocks you got, but it shouldnāt require the whole hood to be loosened enough to be aligned. Apologies if Iām misunderstanding something.Installed and removed the next day. Here is why: hood would not align properly on passenger side no matter how much I attempted to adjust the hood. A few other things that caught my attention; they are carbon dipped, not real carbon fiber, and the hood did not raise that high with them. They do install easy as stated, but it was a little frustrating not getting the passenger side hood aligned after install. Went back to the hood prop....will see if I can get either a Ford Performance or Redline hood strut at Mustang Week next week. Ran out of time to mess with it. I will probably bring it to Mustang Week and sell it to anyone for a reduced price.
Sure, I will clarify. Maybe align was not appropriate wording. Here is the condition which caused me to remove the MRT struts; once installed, the forward bolts have to be tightened to allow the hood to be as before. The install manual states to be sure to use the same bolt alignment as before so that the hood stays properly aligned. That was pretty straightforward; however, as the strut brace is placed between the loosened top hood bolt and the hood, and then tightened down again, the thickness of the strut comes into play for the hood assembly with the bolt. The strut thickness is estimated to be a little less than a 1/4 inch thick, and is pretty close to what the hood was raised on the passenger side. Could never get it to set down and be aligned or even as before. The driver side of the hood also had a raised lip but much less. I really wanted to use this setup for the true plug and play aspect, but it didnāt work for me. Maybe for others, but not me. I donāt have time to try and mess around with hood struts, it either works or donāt. The hood prop works fine and the hood is dead even/aligned whatever you want to call it. Time for me to move on as this particular solution did not fit my particular hood setup. The MRT is a nice piece but I figure with manufacturing tolerances in assembly of two different pieces, hood and struts, that that is bound to happen every once in a while. I am not astounded that this happened. I have been a DIY car guy for 40 plus years and each bolt on is different.Iām curious why you were trying to align the hood in the first place? Iām not familiar with the brand of shocks you got, but it shouldnāt require the whole hood to be loosened enough to be aligned. Apologies if Iām misunderstanding something.
I'm not saying this is the case but a friend did the same thing with the same result...then realized he had them backwards. Worth a look at least.Sure, I will clarify. Maybe align was not appropriate wording. Here is the condition which caused me to remove the MRT struts; once installed, the forward bolts have to be tightened to allow the hood to be as before. The install manual states to be sure to use the same bolt alignment as before so that the hood stays properly aligned. That was pretty straightforward; however, as the strut brace is placed between the loosened top hood bolt and the hood, and then tightened down again, the thickness of the strut comes into play for the hood assembly with the bolt. The strut thickness is estimated to be a little less than a 1/4 inch thick, and is pretty close to what the hood was raised on the passenger side. Could never get it to set down and be aligned or even as before. The driver side of the hood also had a raised lip but much less. I really wanted to use this setup for the true plug and play aspect, but it didnāt work for me. Maybe for others, but not me. I donāt have time to try and mess around with hood struts, it either works or donāt. The hood prop works fine and the hood is dead even/aligned whatever you want to call it. Time for me to move on as this particular solution did not fit my particular hood setup. The MRT is a nice piece but I figure with manufacturing tolerances in assembly of two different pieces, hood and struts, that that is bound to happen every once in a while. I am not astounded that this happened. I have been a DIY car guy for 40 plus years and each bolt on is different.
I donāt think itās possible to install backwards. The bolts align one way only and the strut has a flange that sets into the hood bracket one way only.I'm not saying this is the case but a friend did the same thing with the same result...then realized he had them backwards. Worth a look at least.
Yeah I never had issue with MRT myself but but a friend...in his ecoboost....recently did....lolI donāt think itās possible to install backwards. The bolts align one way only and the strut has a flange that sets into the hood bracket one way only.