installing new suspension into a 156 v6 (slowly)

Started by wankski, December 27, 2011, 07:35:14 PM

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wankski

(repost from ausalfa)
so, i got around to putting in my bilstein b12 kit (b6 damper + eibach pro kit springs) over the xmas break when i knew i had more than the bare minimum 2 days quoted for this job!...

wow, was i off in terms of time! basically took all day faffing about and only got as far as full front dis-assembly + new upper wishbones installed...

i basically failed at the spring compressor stage... the ones i had were not suitable for one reason or another... the front coils are quite small in diameter and the damper is very close... one set of compressors fouled on the damper making centering impossible... the other was a double claw design kindly lent by shiny - would be PERFECT for the rear springs which are quite wide, but you can only hook one claw on the fronts which i thought was a bit unsafe and aborted... - will be taking the two original fronts to the local brake shop to use their proper hydro press to swap the mounting hardware over to the new stuff!

better be worth it!!

on the up side i found the whole endeavour fairly straight forward - i wont make a guide - plenty of great ones around... DTE was fecking useless! will say this tho... i heard here that peeps found local brake and suspension shops willing to do it for i think $350-400. my advice? cheap, leave it to them!

pics!
breaking top wishbone ball joint

steering arm ball joint broken:

coil assembly withdrawn

top mount and strut removed:

here tis, new arm substituted - some people say install everything then torque so arm is at right position for torquing... i say how the fark am i s'posed to fit a torque wrench in there?? i torqued it to a tad below 40nm (factory ref is 40-49daN) off the car with the arm positioned to where it should be:

top arm has been re-installed to line up the upright cast arm while everything is apart waiting for the new hardware...

should add, none of the stock bolts had any anti seize or even grease on them, all came out completely clean!   ::)

no wonder our British friends who endure cold and salt on their roads have so much trouble with them! for us tho, no need to cut drop links, it came out easy - all ball joint were solidly in tho, THANKS very much to SHINYCAR for again lending me his superb scissors style splitter, did the job PERFECTLY, AND it survived! ta muchly mate!

will say that the two bolts on the alloy fork are VERY tight still.... i wouldn't suggest doing this job unless you have a SERIOUS air wrench, i have a 1000lb-ft AIRCAT heavy duty impact wrench, and it did everything easily, but it did take a while to hammer on these bolts.... anything micky mouse (i.e. from supercrap auto, et al) will probably not work, and reading the trials and tribulations of others going at it with breaker bars and junk, mmm, not worth it me thinks... i'm tried enuff rite now, and barely half way thru!

that said, after doing one side, the other is a doddle!

funnily enough, now that i've seen it all, i think i would have been satisfied with the billie dampers only! with the old strut off, i compressed the piston and no resistance, then stop! resistence, *creak*, and a very slow return to its extended position...

although i suspected it, i didn't necessarily put down all the suspension issues to a bad damper, now i'm pretty sure that was responsible for all the wallowing and pitching my car suffered from... pretty sure stock springs would be ok, but may as well go the whole hog at this point and pray i don't have severe bottoming out issues...  

yea would say, if you've raked up near 100k kms, and you're thinking about it - damper upgrade for sure!

bix

Good info Wankski!
I thought about doing my front & rear Eibach pro-kit updates myself for about 3 seconds. It cost me (from memory) a little over $1000 not including parts to replace uppers, lowers, tie rods, rears and had the Eibach sway bars installed front and rear. Not bad for the blood sweat and tears I would have exuded by doing it myself. Still, nothing like doing it yourself to know your car inside out.

wankski

#2
and in a mad dash to the finish, job done! ;)

rears straight forward but rounded a droplink!   ::)  and needed to nip out and get a deep 22mm socket for the rears.... so i rekon if i didn't faff about with the front springs and the rounded drop link, i reckon i could have done it in one full day, or maybe 10-12 hrs max in total...

some pointers... the rear bilstein b6s come with a new nylock nut. do not use it... the stock 22mm nut is flat, if you try to use the raised nylock the top mounting disk fouls on it and you cannot tighten the rear damper to the rear strut mount. reuse the old one. other than that the rear springs are easy to mount, did it by hand..

i thought because of my eariler delays it would take 3 days, but got it easily within daylight today (2nd day) and i also had to take a wheel off again as i messed up the washer placement (not a big deal, but i wanted it done right)... so all in all flew through it!

took her for a drive - all the wallowing was gone... turned out my rear dampers where CACTUS!!   :o  i took a video of them.. shagged. new drive turns in real quick, and feels good so far, no real harshness noted yet... i have speed humps near my parents place and tried it out... yep, the engine tray scraps a little unless u go REAL slow... maybe it's shagged and dropping somewhere, maybe it can be zip tied... not trying now, i'm stuffed...

all in all though, if i had known what i do now, i would have installed the stock springs for the stock look and convenience - all my problems were the shagged dampers it seems... that said, i have not had the occasion to drive the car in anger yet!  so i'll reserve my judgement on the eibachs!

pics...
before the butchery:

went down to the local brakes plus, they kindly mounted my front coils for me:

rears installed, pretty straight forward:

but not after rounding the drop link hex bolt! oh wells, i'm on the waiting list for the eibach ARB kit!

and, what i've been racing towards over 2 days, the after shot:


damn! ideally i would reinstall the stock springs and see how i like it compared, but after this ordeal don't want to see another damn suspension component ever! (also, seem to have lost a front spring, maybe left it at the brakes plus joint, i'll go look tomoz)

ugh.

wankski


bix

Yep, nice and hung-low Wankski, just like my women  ;D
Watch those speed-humps though as you may leave your sump behind in the process. I just ordered an aluminium engine tray from the Dutch mob (alfa stumper?), as I think my original one melted at Philip Island the other day...

wankski

oh god, that better not happen!  :P haha, sooo tempted to try throwing on my stock springs and seeing how i like it - that said, i am impressed with the ride, i'm just livid eibach don't make a 1cm spacer kit... my front fits two fingers and the rear 3, as they all do... why can't they be level? IMO the rear drop is PERFECT, why is the front hunkered down like that just to scrape it's sump i'll never know...

1cm spacer! pls someone make one! apparently ALFATUNER are in the business of making them for various race alfas but didn't even up doing it for the 156 due to low demand, d'oh!  :-\

oh wells, i'll see how this goes...

L4OMEO

Wow, your 156 looks great bix, those GTA rims suit it a treat. How is it on track?
2002 156 GTA

bix

Thanks L4OMEO. The car handles pretty good on the track, although Colin tells me the 156 is far too heavy to compete with Alfetta, Alfasuds etc; and looking at some of the times those guys are doing, he's right. It was my first time at an AROCA sprint and first time at PI, and was pretty happy to come away with a 2:18 on road tyres. The standard TwinSpark motor seems to keep up with some of the similar capacity motors on the straight, but I need to improve some of my driving skills before looking to get rid of around 300 kgs on the car :D

colcol

Back about in about 2,000,in my 1.5 33,  i could do a 2-16 on road tyres, but my much better co driver managed a 2-13, thats when standard Alfetta's used to do 2-08, i remember the day a modified Alfetta cracked 2 minutes, it was one of those moments that you just had to be there, Colin.
1974 VW Passat [ist car] 1984 Alfa 33TI [daily driver] 2002 Alfa 156 JTS [daily driver]

ANG156

Joe,

I thought the red springs are sportline versions while the black is prokit.
http://performance-suspension.eibach.com/cms/street_performance_performance_springs

I also have the red springs in my car and have always thought them to be sportline.

Tye aussie eibach site has these listed as prokits
http://www.eibachdirect.com/b/19606/1/alfa-romeo.html

My springs were dealer options and i believe they are these
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Alfa-Romeo-156-LOWERING-SPRINGS-KIT-/390270980100?pt=AU_Car_Parts_Accessories&hash=item5addf69004

Would you say they are prokit or sportline?

wankski

correct. pro kit are usually black but they depend on application...

for alfa they are red. if you have eibachs they have a part number printed on them. for the 156 they are EW1020001VA front and EW1020002HA rear...

http://eibach.com.ua/price.htm

for the sportlines they will be black and will have:
21-10-002-01-VA front    21-10-002-01-HA rear

i always check the parts numbers of parts i get in, and confirm. Nothing more frustrating then dissembling your car only to find someone supplied you with a wrong part, esp when you've been a bit 'destructive' when removing the original thinking you no longer needed it.

if you are changing dampers too make sure u have the right ones!!

HTHs

bix

ANG156,
I hate doing this as I know the current sensitivity towards online shopping and potentially impacting our great local businesses (especially our sponsors), but Alfisti have a good price on the Eibach kits which should be delivered pretty cheaply

http://shop.alfisti.net/Tuning-Styling/Alfa-156/Suspensions/Eibach-ProSystem-syspension-kit::1145.html