Hi Gary.
On my previous Trad, a 1999 +4, I fitted Pete Mulberry’s steering bearings and the recommended 140lb springs, and adjustable AVO’s, along with hard chrome kingpins and new bushes, which improved the ride and steering considerably, but I still felt the front end of the car was far too firm.
After reading the suggestion of shortening the rebound springs I thought well, if my efforts don’t work and it does all go a bit tits-up then I can just buy new ones and everything will be fine again. So with this option as a back-up, I confidently set to work with the angle grinder and took 20mm off each rebound spring.
Not only did it considerably soften the ride and made the steering even easier, but it also gave me an extra 20mm of welcome ground clearance. I’m no racer, and no doubt some spirited driving on a track may come up with some shortfalls of this mod, but for everyday motoring the improvements were considerable. A softer ride, a more ‘settled’ feel on the road, and lighter and more feel to the steering. All for a few hours work and, most importantly, zero cost, too.
There’s a film showing the front suspension in action:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rjh89U3qTN4In the film the rebound spring does seem to spend a lot of the time not touching the hub at all, and even when static there seems to be minimal compression of the spring. I know that on my +4 the rebound spring was under considerable compression when static, (so much so that it wasn’t possible to turn the spring by hand at all) which led me to believe that things could be improved by reducing its length so allowing the main spring to expand and lose some of its pre-loading, and also reducing the pressure on the steering bearing.
I didn’t want to be too drastic in my actions, so I settled on taking 20mm off the springs with careful use of an angle grinder. With a bit of work I was able to get a pretty good level finish to the cut, and with the spring exerting considerably less force than before I was reasonably confident that no damage would be caused to its mating surface.
The rebound springs could then be turned by hand when static (but only just), so I’m happy that the 20mm taken off is about right. My thoughts are that any more taken off would have left the hub ‘floating’, and any less probably wouldn’t have made that much difference.
Theory is all well and good, but I like to try the practical approach. If it works – fine. If it doesn’t - OK, let’s try something else. For me, this relatively simple (and free!) modification softened the ride, gave increased suspension travel, lightened and improved the feel of the steering, and increased the ground clearance by 20mm. The car still handled very well, and personally I couldn’t really notice any difference in body roll, but that maybe something to do with my driving style. If I was to try hurtling around a track sometime, then maybe I’d think differently. All I can say is that it improved things no-end as far as I’m concerned
So if anyone’s contemplating forking out loads of money on trying to improve the ride quality (and ground clearance) of their Trad, I reckon they could do worse than give this free option a try first.
I've since moved on to a Roadster that came fitted with the Suplex adjustable front suspension, but I feel the ride in my old +4 was as good as, if not better than my current Roadster. However, this may be down to the Roadster still being comparatively new with only 8000 miles on it, so only time will tell, I suppose.