Well, I finally finished putting my front suspension together. I replaced the ball joints, shocks, and sway bay bushings. I also pressure washed the wheel wells and suspension parts. I also replaced my brake master cylinder and flushed the brake fluid.
I replaced the sway bar bushings with solid urethane parts. The stock sway bar bushings are 25mm with an 8mm bolt holding it all together. This happens to be the same size as the 3G prelude, and most of the early to mid 90's civics/integras. I was able to get a set of energy suspension urethane bushings for a civic at autozone. They are a direct fit into the 3G accord.
The difference they made in the steering response is amazing. The solid bushings have made it absolutely necessary for me to install some lowering springs and better shocks, though. The steering is so direct and responsive that the body just rolls all over the place with the stock springs and shocks. The front of the car feels pretty stiff and predictable, but the rear end of the car really like to bounce and slide around -- even at low speeds.
I'm hoping that some lowering springs and some shocks will fix that. Since the 3gee doesn't have any decent rear side-to-side stabilization, I'll probably also install a strut tower bar.
Has anyone installed a sway bar back there? Does anyone have any skidpad numbers for the sedan with lowering springs and better shocks?
the car handles fine (kinda) below 50 mph, but anything faster is dangerous. The car rides like a caddy on the stock suspension, but if i need to do any kind of quick move on the hiway, i'll crash. the car will either roll over or slide off the road.
I've been driving my hatch around and that seems to handle A LOT, A LOT better on the stock suspension. It's amazing how much of a difference just the shape of the body can make. The hatchback is WAY stiffer and WAY more balanced/predictable than the sedan and coupe.
I guess i'm just used to the lowered 4WS prelude... :wink:
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