I could have used the stock strut mounts with this setup, but the other issue i had before was a shimmy, and now with the aluminum mounts there is no shimmy (the rest of my front end is immaculate, including the original center link).
Typically the stock strut mounts are only one of the causes of shimmy…but not the major one. Using asymmetrical late 412 mounts takes care of this. If they ever shimmy, they simply need a new rubber insert…cheap. But I agree…a solid mount is nice.
You should rebuild the center link if you plan to continue using it with upgraded suspension. It is the cause of about 85% of all shimmies in the 411/412 front end. They were all defective…100% of them… even brand new ones. It is a material defective. Wrong nylon on the inside.
The reason I chose the rabbit insert was that it seems to be the strut insert of choice for super beetles (and iirc top line parts uses the rabbit insert, they are supposed to be experts), which i figured was a comparable chassis. Also, should I later decide to change the valving, bilstein offers this service fairly cheap.
The rabbit strut is the strut of choice for super beetles…..but…that has virtually no relation whatsoever to the 411/412 except for very basic configuration of the front suspensions. Different weight, different spacing, totally different control arm leverage and length…different inertia…different springs and valving inside of the strut cartridge.
I’m not going to badmouth Topline…because they offer usable answers for Super beetle folks ….when no one else does. However I’m not really impressed with the result of their product. Quality yes…result…no. I have ridden in a handful of Topline super beetle set-ups and was not impressed at the choppiness and oscillation of the front end. It’s not that it was bad…it’s just that the upgrade to handling was only moderate. To have that level of feedback….it should have been a serious handling upgrade. That’s a sure sign of incorrect valving for spring rate and weight. They had to start somewhere….and they found an existing strut cartridge that they could make fit….but the valving is a bit far off what is really needed for a super….for what you can tune for with spring only.
No actually…it could be QUITE expensive for Bilstein to help you….because it may take multiple episodes unless you have a recipe or a strut insert you can bring to them to have them match.
I didn’t start by looking at the Audi cartridge. I went through about 50+ cartridges from a wide range of makes looking for one with compression and rebound valving very close to what stock is. It just so happened…that the KYB GR-2…had that valving. The oil version and the Gas-a-just version do not. This is what people do not realize. It’s what I did not realize either at the time. Valving is set for an application…..a vehicle weight, layout and spring rate combo. Then it is tweaked or adjusted to match the fluid type used. The oil filled Audi 4000 strut was fantastic on the rebound. But not enough on the compression stroke though…because our springs are different from the Audi spring it was set up for. It bottomed out too easily. I actually tried a set. The Gas-a-just was far too stiff. It broke a ball joint. I actually just got lucky that KYB makes the Gr-2…a low pressure gas cartridge. That combination along with the valving which was similar to the stock cartridge….is a HUGE handling improvement. But if you change that combo too much (excessive spring compression, new springs etc.)…you will need to find something else again.
I did a lot of experimentation and testing….but also during that I got very lucky to find the cartridge I did. I try to save people the 2 years or so of anguish and testing I did.
If I did make an extension for the strut, this setup may start to bottom out because the spacer would be pushing the piston further into the strut when the car is at rest because my springs are so much shorter than stock.
That is physically impossible. This is also why I tell people to really explore hard…...the geometry of the front end of their 411/412. With the stock strut…with that huge long rod….the car could NEVER EVER use more than about 1/3 of that total rod before reaching nearly coil bind on the springs. The control arms will bottom out on the body before you ever even approach even using half the rod length. The 411/412 control arm geometry is physically incapable of using more than about 5”-6” of total rod stroke. On the Audi/rabbit cartridge (same basic length dimensions)..you cannot bottom these out either …even with a full trunk going over speed bumps at 50 mph.
Again…explore the geometry. With the Audi/Rabbit strut rod length….you are starting with a significantly shorter rod….even so…the length of this shorter rod is longer when fully extended that the suspension is capable of compressing. All the stub extension does…is extend the length of that short rod so it can reach upward and connect with the strut bushing. The object is not make the combined short rabbit/Audi strut rod….the exact same length as the original 411/412 strut rod. To bring the front end level…we make it about 1” shorter than stock. With the front end now perfectly level…we now also have 1” more pre-load on the spring (in the ride control zone area of the spring)….the makes it even harder for the strut rod to bottom out (even if it were possible). If you want to go a little further…you can make the stud and strut rod combination be a total of 2” shorter than the stock 411/412 strut rod…which gives the car a slight forward rake…..and is slightly nicer in the wind….but makes it handle worse in braking into a corner….unless you do work on the rear outer links to take away inertia diving.
Also, I agree that lowering it to this degree is just for looks.
Nothing wrong with that. Just be careful because you can break this front end really easily.
I am looking into raising the subframe and/or getting control arms made or something along those lines to change the camber and the camber on compression. this would also deal with the possibility of cracking the subframe.
I don’t understand what you mean by the raising of the subframe idea. Camber adjustment can be added for $20 and an hour of time. Very simple. Simply scribe an elongated hole pattern at the control arm bushing bolt hole....just like that on your rear trailing arm mount. Clearance it with a die grinder into a slot shape. Then install eccentric bolts identical to those used on the rear trailing wishbones. Install an 8mm bolt about 17mm from the slot center for the cam on the eccentric bolt to bear against when adjusting. Done. You now have full camber adjustment. This used to be installed at dealers upon request.
Castor adjustment is simpler but you need to remove the subframe to have some light machine work done. This vehicle already has provision for camber adjustment but only allows you to split the difference from side to side. It affects camber when you do this so even if you did not want MORE castor…you should install the camber eccentrics bolts.
The way this works is that the two front 19mm bolts for the subframe…one on each side….screw into captive nuts in grooves inside of the chassis. If you loosen both bolts and the pivot bolt in the rear…the entire subframe can slide about 19mm to either side…pivoting on the rearward bolt. There is a slot/hole near each bolt in the front…specifically so you can slip in a pry bar to adjust this when the car is on the rack. Oddly…the rear pivot bolt is also screwed into a captive sliding nut in the chassis…but its slot moves fore and aft.
So take the subframe and have the two forward holes machined into slots toward the rear. Now the subframe can slide forward about 5/8” giving you about 3° castor…which is ideal. You can do this on a drill press if you have a good vise.
Ray,