wde_bdy wrote:If you need to shorten the shocks to keep the springs captive technically you need to cert it anyway. Personally I would go custom wound from Chamberlains.
Callum
Hmm, good to know. Fortunately I don't take my car to VTNZ for WOF's so I shouldn't get asked any questions, but that's definitely some food for thought.
Bazda wrote:Lowering alot on stock shocks = arse ride.
IMO Teins are give you the best ride and handling. But they dont go super low. Stock shocks aren't designed to sit that low and are not designed to run stiff springs.
To keep it all legal I would suggest pulling the shocks out from the struts and using Koni yellow inserts.
This way you prob dont need a cert, but its alot of mucking around to get it right. At the end of the day coilovers are the easier option
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
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Yeah a lot of guys I know in the US are running Tein S-Techs in their Corollas, but they appear to only drop it about as much as my car. Have heard great things about how they handle though, but at the moment for me making it look better comes before making it handle better since there's not much of an overwhelming urge to throw it around corners with the 5A-FE under the hood
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
. The Koni inserts are a good suggestion. I remember seeing a guy do that on another Toyota forum a few years back. Just worried that it'd be more trouble than it's worth to go that way. Probably be cheaper to chuck some 205/50/17's on to fill up the gap instead, lol.
XSVWGN wrote:shortened shocks with superlow dobis. Mechanics etc never noticed the ride height and never asked questions
Matt
Thanks a lot for the photos Matt. I just realised that you're the guy who was selling the Dobi Super Lows on TradeMe a couple of years back. I remember asking for a photo of how low the car sat with them installed and you put up the shot of your Corolla on the back of the trailer
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
. Shame I didn't buy them right then and there.
1I1 wrote:My Corolla was fractionally lower than your car is currently and would smack bumpstops when there was a surface change on the road (ie bridges). It was really annoying. Just something to be wary of using stock shocks.
Damn, that used to happen to my brother's old Starlet Glanza V. So would I risk that happening even if I had the factory shocks shortened? Or do you mean that it'd be better to run some pre-shortened shocks from the get go?
h8wrxs wrote:get a $24 grinder form bunnings and chop springs to suit
![Wink :wink:](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
Haha, I've got one of those $24 angle grinders from Bunnings and as tempting as that sounds, I think I'd rather spend a bit more and do the job properly
![Twisted Evil :twisted:](./images/smilies/icon_twisted.gif)