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Lowering springs advice

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  • Lowering springs advice

    Not an urgent modification for me yet but MUST be done in the near future.

    Just need to find a decent shop to install my Eibach lowering springs. Prefer the workshop to be reliable, reasonable labour rate and aren't sloppy.

    Some shops are asking for a whole days labour $550-$680 to install them. The last time I paid to install springs was about 6 years ago, took under 2 hours for all 4 and cost $180 labour..


    ~35mm drop front and back with 235/35 R19.
    MY11 B7 Passat 125TDi Highline
    Pearl Mocca Anthracite | Electric and Heated Leather | Folding Mirrors | Sunroof | Adaptive Lighting Package | Footwell Lighting | Park Assist 2 | Lane Assist | RNS510 | R36 Pedals | Scirocco MFSW | Front Lip | 20" Suzuka Wheels | H&R Springs | De-Badged | VCDS Mods | Alpine Mono and 8" Subwoofer

  • #2
    Not sure who you have contacted yet....if you havent already then try Volksmuller on Annangrove Rd

    They installed my coilovers at a very reasonable price and set them to a perfect height....highly recommended

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    • #3
      Rears will take 40 minutes tops (probably 30m) say $60-80 depending on hrly rate

      Fronts will take 3 hrs tops - say $300 - $360

      Ideally you'll get a wheel alignment afterwards - $60 for a shonky one. $100-$140 for a decent one.
      carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
      I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums

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      • #4
        Yeah, that's what I thought.

        I've been asking 'prestige' workshops.

        I might ask the VW mechanic at Giraween, he knows his stuff and isn't a con like other shops.

        Why is there such price range for wheel alignment? I thought all shops who do the laser alignment are petty much the same?
        MY11 B7 Passat 125TDi Highline
        Pearl Mocca Anthracite | Electric and Heated Leather | Folding Mirrors | Sunroof | Adaptive Lighting Package | Footwell Lighting | Park Assist 2 | Lane Assist | RNS510 | R36 Pedals | Scirocco MFSW | Front Lip | 20" Suzuka Wheels | H&R Springs | De-Badged | VCDS Mods | Alpine Mono and 8" Subwoofer

        Comment


        • #5
          There's a few good independants up near where you are. You've said one & Volksmuller has a good rep too.

          Why the difference in prices? For a start, ask to see the "technicians" MVRIC licence. I think you'll find a fair few cheap places aren't using qualified mechanics - maybe they are perfectly good at their job & have years of experience but maybe they haven't seen an alignment machine until the week before.

          Some places churn through alignments (1 booking every 15-20 minutes) & only play with the factory adjustments & then only if they are outside the green area. eg: If the LHS camber is -0.75 & the RHS is -1.00 & this is within spec they'll leave it rather than try & get the RHS camber less than the LHS.

          The good guys will have a fiddle with so-called non-adjustable items (eg: ball joint nuts, knuckle joint mounts, sub-frames, strut top mounts) to try & get the ideal setting. They will also be willing to adjust within the green range to achieve an optimum result rather than near enough being good enough & through years of experience will have settings that they use that are outside the green zone but stop tyre wear or the vehicle drifting. I used to have a unique set of alignment settings & tyre pressures for 1970s Mercedes, 1970s Taragos, Holdens, Falcons & Valiants that were nothing like factory. One of the reasons I got a job working on aircraft was because the interviewer was an ex-client & I was the only person he knew that could stop the tyre wear on his fleet of 5 Geminis (Geminis used to wear on both the inside & outside of the tread - partly because GMH recommended 26psi all round for the 145r13 tyres).

          As an indication, the Guy at Spinning Wheel had my mate's Polo up on the alignment hoist 3 times getting the alignment as close to perfect as possible - supposedly Polos aren't alignable beyond front toe so I assume he was having a fiddle with non-adjustable items asnobody could stuff-up the toe 3 times in a row.

          If I was still doing alignments I'd be hitting people up for $100+ per alignment as well. peanuts/monkeys/etc
          carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
          I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums

          Comment


          • #6
            Back when I was a lad we used a piece of string around the back wheel stretched to the front wheel to do the alignment. How times have changed.

            Cheers

            (Really old) Paul
            1978 MK1 2.0 16v http://www.vwwatercooled.com.au/foru...-46488-70.html
            1991 MK2 GTI 2.0 8v, white (RIP) and it's red replacement http://www.vwwatercooled.com.au/foru...gti-42078.html
            1997 MK3 CL http://www.vwwatercooled.com.au/foru...ml#post1292061
            2001 & 2002 Bora 4motion. http://www.vwwatercooled.com.au/foru...st-123823.html

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            • #7
              Originally posted by sports racer View Post
              Back when I was a lad we used a piece of string around the back wheel stretched to the front wheel to do the alignment. How times have changed.

              Cheers

              (Really old) Paul
              I used to double check all mine with a tape measure as I didn't trust the electronics of the day.
              carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
              I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums

              Comment


              • #8
                Any ideas what I could do if I'm not 100% satisfied with the height once the springs are installed. The Eibach are a fixed height drop (I don't want KMac or King Springs, I know they can be matched to be the same hub to guard measurement front and rear)

                I don't want to fork out the cash for coil overs but I just want the front and rear hub to guard to be the same, I don't want the rear to sit on the tyres and the front to be 10mm above, I'd rather both have the same space.. Not sure if I'm explaining it clearly??

                -Obvious thing would be to grind them to sit the same height BUT it's not a VL or corolla lol
                MY11 B7 Passat 125TDi Highline
                Pearl Mocca Anthracite | Electric and Heated Leather | Folding Mirrors | Sunroof | Adaptive Lighting Package | Footwell Lighting | Park Assist 2 | Lane Assist | RNS510 | R36 Pedals | Scirocco MFSW | Front Lip | 20" Suzuka Wheels | H&R Springs | De-Badged | VCDS Mods | Alpine Mono and 8" Subwoofer

                Comment


                • #9
                  If they are too high you can get them reset lower. If they are too low you're buggered as "stretching"the spring is usually only temporary.

                  The springs settle a bit too - so if they look a bit tall at first they could drop a bit more in the first 12 months.
                  carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
                  I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums

                  Comment

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