S
Skant
Guest
I've recently replaced the front monoleaf spring on my 1996 after it delaminated. The rear monoleaf appears to be in fine condition and was not replaced.
If the front spring is seven years newer than the rear spring, will this unbalance the handling? Do the front and rear springs need to be replaced together?
I expect that springs lose tension with age. So I'm sure there has to be at least some relative difference there between the new and old spring. But hopefully it would be too fractional to have a noticable handling effect.
I ask because to me the car feels understeery now. But I'd gotten used to a very weakened, damaged front spring which made the car oversteery. In fact, the car is probably pretty balanced now. But it's shifted in the understeer direction from what I'm used to.
Maybe it's supposed to have some understeer. Or maybe my front spring isn't broken in all the way yet. At the start, it was _very_ understeery with an overstiff fresh spring, and it's been settling down as it breaks in. Or I've just been getting used to it. Hard to tell which exactly. Maybe a bit of both.
- Skant
If the front spring is seven years newer than the rear spring, will this unbalance the handling? Do the front and rear springs need to be replaced together?
I expect that springs lose tension with age. So I'm sure there has to be at least some relative difference there between the new and old spring. But hopefully it would be too fractional to have a noticable handling effect.
I ask because to me the car feels understeery now. But I'd gotten used to a very weakened, damaged front spring which made the car oversteery. In fact, the car is probably pretty balanced now. But it's shifted in the understeer direction from what I'm used to.
Maybe it's supposed to have some understeer. Or maybe my front spring isn't broken in all the way yet. At the start, it was _very_ understeery with an overstiff fresh spring, and it's been settling down as it breaks in. Or I've just been getting used to it. Hard to tell which exactly. Maybe a bit of both.
- Skant





