In reply to Professor_Brap (Forum Supporter) :
Thanks Prof. Brap! Along with a few other builds on here, I'm trying to show that not every one of these is a neglected, slammed, salvage-titled car with the battery tie down missing, an annoyingly loud muffler, and knockoff rimz.
Today I returned to the shop and did the front coilovers.
Based on my experience with the rears, I used the impact to run the top nuts up to near the top of the threads with the stock fronts still installed on the car.
Out with the old, in with the new!
These were really easy, compared to the rears which gave me a moderate bit of a hassle. Some of the online install reports I read indicated that the sway bar end links can be a hassle to line up unless both sides are disconnected (problematic when you have to connect one side, then the other) but I had zero issues. I got the coilover in place, and got the three nuts on the engine bay side of the top mount started loosely by hand. With the coilover hanging by the top mount, and the knuckle/upright hanging by the lower ball joint and steering tie rod, I used the full articulation of both ends of the end link, as well as the range of movement in the loosely dangling coilover to get both ends of the sway bar end link aligned with the hole in the coilover and started before moving on.
The upper hole in the coilover is slotted, which allows some camber adjustment without crash bolts, which is pretty sweet. I did the right front first, and had trouble re-installing the upper bolt. It would start, but wouldn't go in all the way, hanging up on the last shoulder.
Then I remembered that when I was reading some install reports, somebody mentioned needing to order a couple extra lower bolts to replace the upper bolts with the fatter shoulder, and I thought, "Crap. I took the train out to the shop on Easter Sunday afternoon. I don't have any M14 fine bolts at the shop. Can't walk to any hardware stores or FLAPS, and even if I could, would they be open? Can't drive the car anywhere as it is...what to do?" I gazed across the shop, and there was grandpa's old Maximat lathe...knew I kept that around for a reason beyond sentiment!
The crazy part is that I didn't have the same issue on the left front when I went to check (which I'm glad I did!) The remaining question is, what was the issue on the right front? At this point I just wanted to slam the thing back together and go for a drive, so I didn't investigate. I don't think I tried to install the bolt backwards, but I suppose it is possible. In any case, with all the fasteners torqued, not likely to be an issue before the next time I have it up with wheels off. I pushed both front knuckles to full negative camber, brought both back a little bit, in about the same amount, and tightened. I'm inquiring about an alignment this week.
I set all four corners just slightly shy of maximum upper ride height, and started torquing. The problem I encountered was the upper nuts on the shock shaft. The manual suggests 25 Nm on the front, and I think 18 Nm rear, and on both it says, "use supplied nuts." Out of the box the rear coilovers had a pair of very thin nuts, like a nut and jam nut, and the fronts came with a nyloc. I interpreted supplied nuts as the nuts that came from KW, so I used them both front and rear. The problem is that the install manual from KW also tells you not to use any impact tools, and not to clamp the shock shaft in any way, as both may damage the shock. Not sure how one achieves proper torque within these parameters, but I figured full thread engagement plus 'seems tight' would suffice.
On the rear I jammed the jam nuts together as far down the threads as practical, and on the front I ran the nyloc down as far as I felt practical, and there was lots of me cranking on a wrench, just spinning and spinning the shock shaft. Neither top felt loose on the shock by hand once 'tightened' down.
I figured I'd put the wheels on and take a spin around the block.
Kinda funny to see it up on jackstands right by the lift, but the Traklites with Dunlop Direzzas look as good as ever on there. Still might refinish these wheels from satin black to a dark bronze someday.
I took it for a test spin around the block, plus an attempt at brake bed-in, but the clunking/clattering was very disconcerting, so I cut it short and returned. I could hear each various corner transitioning on and off the helper spring and main, but with accompanying clunks against the chassis, and by the time I'd gotten around the block and back to the shop, was telling myself, all the strut tops are loose.
Sure enough, they were. I ran them down tighter, using, uh...fully approved methods per the manual.
I'm undecided what to do with the rubber cap. I guess cut a tightly-fitting hole in it to keep crud out of the bearing, but allow the strut top to poke through? The stock cap won't stretch over the shaft once tightened.
I went out for a little drive and wow! WOW! WOW!! They feel like stock, but with better response and better comfort! Amazing, but true! Couldn't be more pleased on initial impressions. This is the new V3, which is something like 70% stiffer front, 45% stiffer rear spring rate than stock, and softer than the old version of the KW V3. Perfect for me as far as I can tell from a couple short drives.
I also did some further brake bed in on the drive home...Sunday non-traffic.