Anybody here fitted Cup car suspension to their turbo???
I have not completed the retrofit yet. I hsve quite the laundry list of things to do. I have verified that these will work on the rears though. I will snap some pictures to load here.
You do not need spacers for the front at all best i can tell. The front shocks extended are the same length as my H&R front coilover.
You do not need spacers for the front at all best i can tell. The front shocks extended are the same length as my H&R front coilover.
What is the thickness of these spacers? And are you eliminating the top mount to run these? From what I have read you need about 1-1.75 inches to make it work. Next question is the adjustability, can you still reach the **** on top?
Originally Posted by heavychevy
What is the thickness of these spacers? And are you eliminating the top mount to run these? From what I have read you need about 1-1.75 inches to make it work. Next question is the adjustability, can you still reach the **** on top?
When i have the suspension fitted, i will take pictures with the spacer and also showing droop. And i will also show pictures comparing shock lengths to my H&R coils. I do not think this is going to be a failure as some think. It will take some tweaking, but i intend on documenting so that anybody else wanting to do this will have all the info to make it work without reinventing the wheel.
It was a while back but for some reason I wanna say that in order to have sufficient shock droop at full extension, the spacer will need to be right at 2-2.25" thick especially if you don't end up running 26.8" tall cup rears. Those in and of itself account for 0.7". Also, I would not go softer on the main springs and would stick with the stock H&R 240/260 springs, especially since your keeping the OEM helpers. These shocks have limited travel and are designed for fairly stiff springs on a chassis 600# lighter than our cars. I run 1400/1500 mains which is just a hair stiffer than the 6cup mains and it works very well even on bumpy tracks. Under no circumstance would I run anything less that 1200 or so on these shocks. Good luck with the project. This might be a cheap way for guys to get into a track set up as a lot of these shocks are sitting in shops after being swapped for upgraded triples or quads..
Last edited by pwdrhound; Nov 6, 2015 at 04:49 PM.
Originally Posted by pwdrhound
I would not go softer on the main springs and would stick with the stock H&R 240/260 springs, especially since your keeping the OEM helpers. These shocks have limited travel and are designed for fairly stiff springs on a chassis 600# lighter than our cars. I run 1400/1500 mains which is just a hair stiffer than the 6cup mains and it works very well even on bumpy tracks. Under no circumstance would I run anything less that 1200 or so on these shocks. Good luck with the project. This might be a cheap way for guys to get into a track set up as a lot of these shocks are sitting in shops after being swapped for upgraded triples or quads..
As for the shocks, these have the capability to be adjusted for the rate of springs i am running according to Sachs and have been run at lower rates in other race applications that do not require stock spring rates exclusively. So i should be good with this setup. Obviously we will see.
Currently the springs 180R/160F. If i were trailering the car to tracks i would run stock cup rates. I am starting here and can go up from this. I consulted a friend who has experience building and tracking cups and RSR and he advised that the stock helper for these springs should work well.
As for the shocks, these have the capability to be adjusted for the rate of springs i am running according to Sachs and have been run at lower rates in other race applications that do not require stock spring rates exclusively. So i should be good with this setup. Obviously we will see.
As for the shocks, these have the capability to be adjusted for the rate of springs i am running according to Sachs and have been run at lower rates in other race applications that do not require stock spring rates exclusively. So i should be good with this setup. Obviously we will see.
Originally Posted by pwdrhound
Sweet. Curious to see how it turns out. It's always a bit of a gamble to try to reengineer a single part of a system that Porsche race engineers have spent thousands of hours testing for optimum performance. Looking forward to the results...
Originally Posted by heavychevy
That looks awesome. Are you going to the track any time soon? That will be the real test.
I've got a set I'm going to get if this works out for you.
I've got a set I'm going to get if this works out for you.
Here is a comparison of the Sachs GT3cup shocks compared to H&R coilovers. The rears are significantly shorter as suspected. Fronts are almost identical length. Will see what the rears look like with the wheels and subframe.
This is about as close as it gets to any real information. Then again, this thread has almost everything you need to know. What other information are you looking for?
Nice to see you back into it VAG. I was always really curious how this would turn out.
Nice to see you back into it VAG. I was always really curious how this would turn out.
I've set up a lot of suspensions on these cars and my guess is that the rears will be way too short even with the aluminum spacer you are using. A quick calculation tells me you'd need a spacer about 3" thick to get you where you need. The very limited shock travel /droop may present a handling issue with soft springs and a heavy car. You do not want to run out of travel in the rear as that will present dangerous mid corner snap oversteer. (always make sure you end up with more droop in the rear than the front!). Hope I'm wrong and it all works out without issues. Good luck...
Last edited by pwdrhound; Sep 15, 2016 at 09:02 AM.



