Hello Jim,
I am in the market for suspension bits for my 05 STi, and I'm considering Whiteline products for the job. I have a few questions about some of them-
First is a question about your ALK. I've read through your white paper as well as whatever else I can find on the internet about front suspension "anti dive/lift" geometry. I feel I have a pretty firm grasp of the concept, but one thing escapes me- when you show the diagram on how to calculate the SVIC, the bottom line goes straight through what appears to be the front and rear inside pickup points on the A arm, as well as the outside point where the ball joint is. They all appear to be line up perfectly. It also shows lines for accelerating and braking which move above and below the static line. What confuses me is this- what two points are used to figure out the slope of the lower line? If it is the front and the rear inner points then it wouldn't move (unless the chassis did). I assume the rear most point (that the ALK lowers) and the ball joint are what is used for the calculation?
Second, if the ball joint is used as a point, then the amount of anti lift/dive changes when the car is lowered, and if I understand the diagram lowering would reduce swing arm length and SVIC height and reduce the "anti" geometry too. Which makes me ask if the changed geometry is necessary for a lowered car, or if it could even be detrimental. I myself won't be lowered much as I explained in the RCA thread I started here (14" F and 13.5"R hub center to fender), but I'm just curious so I cna better understand the forces at work here.
FInally, I am curious about your polyurethane suspension bushings. I brought this topic up recently in a thread titled something like "hardened bushings vs pillowballs" in the other suspension forum here. As I said there, I've had some bad experiences with poly bushings in a similarly designed rear suspension (the mk2 mr2 to be specific) with binding and I've been a bit wary of their use in off axis movement. Your bushings were said to be higher tech and of better build than a typical bushing there. So my questions are then, is binding a potential issue if I replace all of my bushings (lateral links, trailing links) with your products and what makes your bushings better (and perhaps less susceptible to binding) than say, the energy bushings that I had an issue with?
Thanks for any info. I greatly appreciate a company like yours that not only understands their products, but also innovates with new ones.