Ty Davis
Active Member
This is what I don't understand: if the Stinger is "bouncy" at 30 to 50 mph, but buttoned down the faster it goes, isn't that the best? Soft and cushy at "Civilized" speeds, and firm, high performance at extralegal speeds.
I think that you may be assuming that bouncing = smoother ride
And Firmer = Harsher ride...
True, there is typically a trade off between ride quality and handling/stiffness.
The Stinger in it’s stock form, however, leaves plenty room on the table to increase BOTH ride and handling.
One, in fact, can be increased without diminishing the other. Look at all of the people who have installed stiffer bars, springs, coils, Mando, etc. and reported an increase in both the ride and handling...
But to answer you original question,
Bouncy at slow speeds and firm at high speeds is not the best.
Really, a cars ride characteristics are best when they are consistent and repeatable throughout its entire working range. Ideally a car would be flat, compliant, and have minimal ride motions in response to the road surface.
Things like bounce, float, shimmy, dive, squat, porpoising, and pitch should be minimized in a well tuned sedan.
To resort to adding bounce at low speeds, to civilize the ride, is a bandaid for other issues or bad tuning. We can only do so much with the Mando because the stock shocks have a physical damping curve built into them that can’t be changed without replacement. We can try to work around this, but it will take some time, trial, and error. I’ve gone through a blizzard of settings already, still trying to find what’s best for the hardware we have.
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