Rapid Robert
Well-Known Member
yes they were/are still on sale. 33% 40%
Great explanation.To me there’s things you can get away with on a “weekend car” or infrequent driver that you just can’t get away with on a daily.
If the shocks are stiff and don’t do a good job (or a flat out BAD job) of actually damping the suspension you not only suffer from a ride quality standpoint, you also lose traction and control.
Now, on a weekend car where you only take it out in good weather, stay out of traffic, and don’t do anything all that sporty a set of KYB’s will last forever and give you mediocre to bad performance the whole time, but it probably won’t matter.
On a daily, where you’re going to be exposed to more traffic, poor roads, weather etc the performance of those shocks could also mean being able to avoid an accident. And if you’re logging more miles, well, the odds of something happening only go up. Not to mention you’re logging more miles so improving the ride quality is going to make a big difference in how much you actually want to drive the car. Lousy shocks for a 20 minute drive once in a blue moon is one thing, lousy shocks for a 90 minute commute several times a week is another thing entirely.
This is actually a case of you get what you pay for, the KYB’s are cheap junk and the Bilstein RCD’s are a high quality shock that has a wide range of wheel rates it can handle very well.
a set of KYB’s will last forever and give you mediocre to bad performance the whole time
I am currently using Bilsteins with factory undersized bars™ and they work really well.
I do plan to get thicker bars (and maybe even sway bars) one day, but until then, what I've got is completely acceptable in a 60 year old car. The made the ride smoother, tighter, firmer, and even made the car corner better.
So, while I agree that a good spring rate is important, if you're going to start by changing only one thing, I'd change to Bilsteins first.
– Eric
shouldn't. the air is just a spring. BUT the shock mounts on these cars were never designed to carry the load of the vehicle weight on them, only transient dampening loads. if you had air shocks or those coil over helper shocks, be sure to inspect your shock mounts. when we bought my car with 50000 miles on it back in 1991 with those on it, we discovered both shock mounts broken, IIRC the passenger one was ripped right out of the floorpan.the rear KYB shocks arrived & I went to put em on & discovered that the current rear shocks are air shocks with no psi in em. with no air does that take away all of their dampening ability?