oneheadlite
Well-known member
- Aug 20, 2015
- 1,795
- 100
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4. The EN has an adaptive suspension, so it really doesn't need any work there. Yeah I'm sure if it was being tracked alot some springs would help but if you look at the pics of my car it has a great stance! Also the sway bars and bushes are all tuned and keep in mind thr lead engineer for this car was at BMW for over 20 yrs in charge of the M cars, you don't just forget things because you've come to Hyundai, he's put his stamp on the Stinger and N cars already and it shows
When I took the car on the Dragon and surrounding roads last year it proved itself time and time again. The turn in was incredible, I could just turn harder and faster with each curve, car had me yelling it's greatness constantly!
I've got the trio of Powerflex bushes going in the EN to help with wheel hop, all 3 are the street versions because IMO the race ones are probably too aggressive for a daily driver because that's what my EN is...a DD
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I realize I made my suspension comments without reflecting back on pictures of your car as well as not knowing about the extra factory go-fast bits. What a great era of cars we're in where they're coming so good out of the box. It used to be certain suspension work was just a given because factory ride heights were so high, sprung so softly, etc.
Factory "Stability Control" used to be so over-imposing that you would never want to go enjoy some twisties without disabling it first.
Now it's impressive how fun they can be just out of the box.
Though (**puts on old man hat**), it is kinda terrifying the cars that kids have access to starting out these days. My first car I went terrorizing around in as a kid was a MKII Jetta I had done up for autocross that had all of I think 135 wheel horsepower.
(Edit: That's not true on the first car front - I drove the wheels off my '85 Chevette automatic before I got the Jetta. 65 furious... no, mildly upset horsepower!).
Nowadays you see kids all the time tricking their parents into getting cars with 300hp out of the box.
All that stability control assist with no prior/proper education makes it easy for them to forget the fact that inertia is inescapable, and _,000 lbs is going to want to do what it wants to do...
What about driver mods? Any plans to attend an HPDE with an instructor or start autocrossing?
One thing I've learned over time is modern performance cars are phenomenally capable and they will do amazing things if you know how to extract it.
My BRZ is mechanically stock right now. When I first bought it I had plans to start upgrading the suspension. However, after 1.5 autocross seasons in it I'm starting to see it's brilliance the faster I get and the more I run it. I've learned it was my sloppy driving that lead me to think I needed suspension mods, when what I may really need is to upgrade the brakes. I really want to run it more and continue to learn what it really needs.
+1 for the benefits of self improvement. When I built my E36 M3 (Mainly for Auto X with some HPDEs thrown in), I went big on the suspension and safety front (Poly everything, quicker rack, front sway bar, Seats and belts, roll bar), but did no power adders beyond a Dinan throttle body and cold air intake I got for free off an M3 convertible that had gotten traded in at the dealership I was at. The car was phenomenal, and for what I was doing I wanted to make sure I wasn't just relying on the extra pony to make up for my bad habbits.
All that being said, for a non-tracked daily I support the route you're going Klasse as what you're doing you'll get a kick out of every day. :dblthumb2:
Cosmetic mods will be a given and I'm highly tempted to do an exhaust, just for a bit better noise out back. Something deep and rumbly, not tinny with cracks and pops.
One of the biggest trends that I hate right now is all the cars with the "Burble tunes" that intentionally add fuel under decel for all the cracks and bangs. This isn't anti-lag, it's all just "for show", yet ironically it just makes the cars sound broken...