Grim Jhaixus
Member
So I've been around on other Mopar forums (I'm new here) asking about things like why our cars have torsion bars and if the coil-over kits are truly superior and wasn't satisfied with the responses I had received, so I put the question on a shelf. Now that I'm finally pulling the 318 out I renewed my query to find it answered on a Porsche forum, so I'll share the important bit here with a link to the page because even though its a different car they make a lot of solid argument on this issue. I have searched here and found that generally the opinion is to upgrade the torsion bars and I support that but I think I'm going to have to try coils
My favorite part (complete with authentic typo) :
"Absolutely true that coil-overs require chassis reenforcement to work properly, however once reinforced the ride quality with coil-overs will be better than torsion bars all else being equal. This is the result of lower loads on the trailing arm bushings and hence lower friction in the pivots.
A coil-over spring puts spring force on the trailing arm very close to the wheel axle. The result is a load path the goes from the spring almost directly to the hub and wheel. This puts very little bending moment on the spring plate and hence very little load on the bushings at the spring plate.
With torsion bars the opposite is true- the spring plate carries a lot of bending force, as the load is on one end (the wheel) and the spring force is on the other. The bushing reacts to this force, meaning it is very highly loaded with torsion bars. Since friction is proportional to load the torsion bar suspension has higher friction. High friction results in poor ride quality and lower suspension performance.
This might not be a big issue if there were quality bearings at that location, but unfortunately we have bushings, even the best of which are relatively high friction."
The link to the page for more context on the issues and arguments and experiences of the people involved:
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/pors...uality-coilovers-springs-vs-torsion-bars.html
It's a good read.
My favorite part (complete with authentic typo) :
"Absolutely true that coil-overs require chassis reenforcement to work properly, however once reinforced the ride quality with coil-overs will be better than torsion bars all else being equal. This is the result of lower loads on the trailing arm bushings and hence lower friction in the pivots.
A coil-over spring puts spring force on the trailing arm very close to the wheel axle. The result is a load path the goes from the spring almost directly to the hub and wheel. This puts very little bending moment on the spring plate and hence very little load on the bushings at the spring plate.
With torsion bars the opposite is true- the spring plate carries a lot of bending force, as the load is on one end (the wheel) and the spring force is on the other. The bushing reacts to this force, meaning it is very highly loaded with torsion bars. Since friction is proportional to load the torsion bar suspension has higher friction. High friction results in poor ride quality and lower suspension performance.
This might not be a big issue if there were quality bearings at that location, but unfortunately we have bushings, even the best of which are relatively high friction."
The link to the page for more context on the issues and arguments and experiences of the people involved:
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/pors...uality-coilovers-springs-vs-torsion-bars.html
It's a good read.