> Happy 17th May!
Thanks
> 
> I fitted Koni's to my +2S about 30,000 miles ago.  I set them at 1.5 turns
> originally.  Over time I felt the suspension was not effectively damped (the
> car would dive,  then bounce back when braking hard) so I would wind them up
> a bit.  Now I have them on full "hard" and they are not satisfactory (they
> probably are worn), so I am replacing them soon with Spax shocks with
> adjustable spring perches from Spyder Engineering.   
> 
> How to adjust shocks with minimum effort:
> 
> I got tired of winding up the springs,  releasing them again to take them
> off the shocks,  adjusting the shocks and going through winding  up the
> springs and releasing them again,  with the spring compressor I made up from
> 10mmm threaded rod.  Last time I just compressed the spring once,  removed
> the upper spring seat,  filed out a slot  to fit the shock adjuster flats in
> a suitably sized nut,  brazed the nut to a 1/4" drive socket,  put this on a
> 6" extension, and changed the settings in jig time. 
Pardon my lousy english(and/or mechanical incompetence), but what do you
mean by "changed the settings in jig time", and the "shock adjuster
flats". 
>  You also only need to
> take the tension off the front suspension arms at the chassis ends,  and
> also loosen the front trunnion nuts to remove the shock,  no need to remove
> the arms.  Also drop (and replace) the antiroll bar with the suspension
> fully loaded.
> 
> The rear shocks,  now that's another story !
The joys of Lotus ownership ;)
> 
> I have recently taken delivery of a Spyder chassis,  looks good,  will be
> doing the changeover soon.
Thats the way to go :)
Tor Hval <torhv@ifi.uio.no>
 
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