Has anyone run Koni FSD shocks on track?
#1
Team Owner
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Has anyone run Koni FSD shocks on track?
I'm thinking about getting somoe to compensate for the VB&P poly bushings I have. The roads arond here suck and my car really lets me know now. I have had bilstien sports in since early '05 and they have about 37k on them now.
The FSD is supposedly a new idea in shock valving and gives you nice ride at low speeds but great handling when pushed. It seems to change the damper force in a linear rate to the pressure appied. So the harder you work the shock the firmer it gets. It's all mechanical.
They get rave reveiws, but only in C5 Gen where the waxers and canyon carvers use them.
The FSD is supposedly a new idea in shock valving and gives you nice ride at low speeds but great handling when pushed. It seems to change the damper force in a linear rate to the pressure appied. So the harder you work the shock the firmer it gets. It's all mechanical.
They get rave reveiws, but only in C5 Gen where the waxers and canyon carvers use them.
#2
Burning Brakes
Never tried them myself so I hope someone who has done that will reply. I asked at TireRack how these would be as an autocross shock and was told they were a small improvement over the stock shocks.
Having some limited experience with shock tuning, I'm not so sure that the FSD description is just marketing hype. All shocks have different tuning for high and low speed operation (speed being the speed that the shock is compressed or extended, not the vehicle speed).
Having some limited experience with shock tuning, I'm not so sure that the FSD description is just marketing hype. All shocks have different tuning for high and low speed operation (speed being the speed that the shock is compressed or extended, not the vehicle speed).
#3
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Thanks TTT... a local buddy of mine has them and he said they work. Rides like a caddy in his Z-51 coupe when he's just cruising, but feels better than stock when throwing it in the turns. However, a few turns on the street is not the track.
My car is great on track, but it's getting annoying to drive on the street other than to the local car hangouts and back.
My car is great on track, but it's getting annoying to drive on the street other than to the local car hangouts and back.
#7
I run the FSDs in autocross and track events and love them. We had to run a non-adjustable shock to stay in NCCC group 1, so we went with the FSDs after having good luck with them on our Mini project. Honestly, I'd have a hard time giving them up, even for double adjustables. They just work so well for my driving style in so many situations, and the fact that they aren't adjustable is one less way to screw up the car.
Remember, shocks are a very personal thing. Different shocks lend themselves to different driving styles and approaches. I happen to be a guy who tend to excel with Konis. Something about their digressive valving just suits my style. You might want to mooch a few rides before cracking your wallet.
J.G. Pasterjak
Grassroots Motorsports
Classic Motorsports
Remember, shocks are a very personal thing. Different shocks lend themselves to different driving styles and approaches. I happen to be a guy who tend to excel with Konis. Something about their digressive valving just suits my style. You might want to mooch a few rides before cracking your wallet.
J.G. Pasterjak
Grassroots Motorsports
Classic Motorsports
#9
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I run the FSDs in autocross and track events and love them. We had to run a non-adjustable shock to stay in NCCC group 1, so we went with the FSDs after having good luck with them on our Mini project. Honestly, I'd have a hard time giving them up, even for double adjustables. They just work so well for my driving style in so many situations, and the fact that they aren't adjustable is one less way to screw up the car.
Remember, shocks are a very personal thing. Different shocks lend themselves to different driving styles and approaches. I happen to be a guy who tend to excel with Konis. Something about their digressive valving just suits my style. You might want to mooch a few rides before cracking your wallet.
J.G. Pasterjak
Grassroots Motorsports
Classic Motorsports
Remember, shocks are a very personal thing. Different shocks lend themselves to different driving styles and approaches. I happen to be a guy who tend to excel with Konis. Something about their digressive valving just suits my style. You might want to mooch a few rides before cracking your wallet.
J.G. Pasterjak
Grassroots Motorsports
Classic Motorsports
#10
I have not driven the FSDs to compare but my Koni 3013s ride extremely gentle on the street. They can be turned up to whatever extreme rebound setting you prefer. For me I'm in the middle of the adjustment range most of the time since the T1 sway bars and the girlfriend still prefers it to the stock 01 Z06 shocks it came with. This largely due to the fact it has much less (high-speed) compression damping.