sway bar?
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- deez
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You are getting oversteer because the NA cars are too soft in the chassis for the 336lb rear springs in the flex. Not even a monster front bar with no rear bar will overcome the balance issue you are having. You need to drop your rear spring rate to around 260lb which combined with a matched set of sways (can I suggest whiteline 3 way adjustable front and rear) you will be fine.
How do I know? Because that's how my NA race car was setup and I guarantee it will fix your issues. The rear is just too stiffly sprung. Kings can make the springs to suit too - that's who made my set.
How do I know? Because that's how my NA race car was setup and I guarantee it will fix your issues. The rear is just too stiffly sprung. Kings can make the springs to suit too - that's who made my set.

2006 Z06 Corvette - 650hp of wow!
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Re:
CT wrote:You are getting oversteer because the NA cars are too soft in the chassis for the 336lb rear springs in the flex. Not even a monster front bar with no rear bar will overcome the balance issue you are having. You need to drop your rear spring rate to around 260lb which combined with a matched set of sways (can I suggest whiteline 3 way adjustable front and rear) you will be fine.
How do I know? Because that's how my NA race car was setup and I guarantee it will fix your issues. The rear is just too stiffly sprung. Kings can make the springs to suit too - that's who made my set.
What about when it comes to an NB?
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Re:
Slugoid wrote:CT wrote:You are getting oversteer because the NA cars are too soft in the chassis for the 336lb rear springs in the flex. Not even a monster front bar with no rear bar will overcome the balance issue you are having. You need to drop your rear spring rate to around 260lb which combined with a matched set of sways (can I suggest whiteline 3 way adjustable front and rear) you will be fine.
What's the spring rate for the springs in the Tein SS? Just asking as I'm planning on some new coilovers in the near future.
As for the NA chassis being too soft, would a full underbody chassis brace (like the Flyin' Miata butterfly brace) solve the problem?
http://www.tein.com/mazda.html
- StanTheMan
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Re:
Nickb wrote:CT,
but will keep that in mind. Need to play around a bit to work out what the go is.
ROFLMHO
sounds almost like a response of Adam when God offered to make Eve.
ROFLMHO.
Satans Ride called F33nix the resurrected NA6
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NBs are stiffer in the rear of the car especially so they are fine the stock Tein flex rates. Taking off the rear sway with standard tein springs on my NA did nothing to fix the balance issue - they need a lower rear spring rate or a stupidly stiff front spring rate, ie 500lbs. My NA had a welded in cage too and the rates were still too high. I doubt any underbody bracing will have the same affect as softening the rear springs - it's just too big a step. 

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I agree with CT and Neil about those rear springs being over stiff but there's sttill no harm in trying disconnecting the rear bar. I have Teins with 5kg/4kg spring rates on my NA. Removing the bar balanced it fairly well. From memory you've got 7/6 in the Tein Flex - not all that different proportionally from mine. Only takes 10 minutes to do and at least it'd be better than now.
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Once you get close with to FRC with springs and sway bars then you can fine tune with the adjustables you already have at hand: damper rates (tightening them at one end is like a small increase in spring or bar stiffness), camber (more negative at one end can give relatively more grip there), toe out and tyre pressures. Just vary them one at a time and make them incremental changes, not big steps. It's fun to feel it all come together.
’95 NA8
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