What Exactly.........
Joe
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In the 2000’s the technology of Magnetic Ride was relatively new. We were just cutting our teeth. Over 14 years, the flow of information lead us to continually revise philosophies and tuning strategies.
The final strip down and buildup of how we addressed damping was reflected during the development 2019 ZR1. This strategy was such an improvement, I retuned every 2019 Corvette model for production. 24 calibrations total.
The enhancements were so significant, that I convinced Service Parts Organization to make the 2019 calibrations available to anyone who owned a C7 back to 2014. So, I guess your statement above can also be applied to GM for providing a significant improvement at a relatively low cost to C7 customers. Also, there was 0 interest in doing anything for C6.
Summing it up, I can assure you in 2008 when I tuned many of these packages, I did not think I will purposely develop substandard calibrations so 11 years later I can retire, provide improvements based on my 2019 philosophy, and pocket the cash.
Thank you, Jim
Hope this helps.
GD
Hope this helps.
GD

Hope this clarifies a misunderstanding of his intentions.
GD
And if the answer is yes, what suggestions might you folk offer? I have read about coil overs. Is that viable? Doable with the mag ride?
Thanks in advance!
Joe
Coil overs may work well for you, but you would want to also delete the front & rear composite leaf springs so that you do not conflict with too much spring in the suspension. I am sure others that have successfully done this option will chime in.
Good luck and keep us informed as to your " suspension project".
GD
Jim Mero, the 15 year Corvette Ride and Handling Vehicle Dynamics Engineer who developed the wildly successful Magnetic Ride Control (MRC) upgrade calibrations for all 2014 to 2018 C7 Corvettes has now developed new MRC calibrations for 2009 to 2013 C6 Corvettes.
Last edited by SteveJewels; Jun 25, 2021 at 09:07 PM.
And if the answer is yes, what suggestions might you folk offer? I have read about coil overs. Is that viable? Doable with the mag ride?
Thanks in advance!
Joe
I am enamoured with the MRC system. I am surprised when anyone is less than pleased, let alone dislikes MRC.
There have been cases where the dealer didn't remove the shipping blocks from the shocks. This would result in no detectable difference in the ride between Tour and Sport.
I could definitely tell the difference in mine. Neither was particularly well optimized but they were better than conventional shocks and springs in my experience.
Since Jim reprogrammed my car, significant difference by the way, I have been researching the system. I have a base C6 with MRC. A search of part numbers revealed my car has the same shocks as a Z06 with MRC.
Also, the base C6 with MRC has the same front and rear springs as the 2012/13 Z06 with MRC.
The front bar on my car was 25.4 mm with a wall thickness of 4 mm. The front bar on a 2012/13 Z06 with MRC is 33.3 mm diameter with a 5 mm wall thickness. I couldn't find the part number for that so I got a 33 mm front bar for a ZR1 and poly bushings.
The rear bar on my car was 17.2 mm mm with a wall thickness of 2.5 mm. Basically a cocktail straw. LOL The rear bar on a 2012/13 Z06 with MRC is 31 mm diameter with a 4.7 mm wall thickness. I got a RideTech adjustable Musclebar. It is 25.4 mm in diameter with 4 mm wall thickness and is adjustable from 400 lbs to 775 lbs and comes with poly bushings.
I also upped the tire sizes to 265 front and 345 rear.
Perhaps someone can help me understand how a conventional shock and coilover spring could be better than dampers that have multiple sensors and inputs to dynamically determine the state of the vehicle and suspension in real time and update the dampers for both compression and rebound 1,000 times a second and can adjust each damper independently.
Why would you change to conventional hardware instead of upgrading the programming or using something like a DSC system?
Last edited by SteveJewels; Jun 26, 2021 at 06:18 AM.
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It seems that people with the later C6 version change to coil overs. I would like to understand why that is a good choice.
I'm not being antagonistic. I am an engineer. One of the things I enjoy enjoy about my car is learning about and understanding the functionality of the systems, especially Corvettes in general and my car in specific.
Presently my car has Jim Mero's upgrade for a base C6 with the Super option on the Sport setting. He has other programming for a Z06 with a track mode option and a Tour 2 and Track mode for a C6 with ZR1 suspension.
Thanks!
In the 2000’s the technology of Magnetic Ride was relatively new. We were just cutting our teeth. Over 14 years, the flow of information lead us to continually revise philosophies and tuning strategies.
The final strip down and buildup of how we addressed damping was reflected during the development 2019 ZR1. This strategy was such an improvement, I retuned every 2019 Corvette model for production. 24 calibrations total.
The enhancements were so significant, that I convinced Service Parts Organization to make the 2019 calibrations available to anyone who owned a C7 back to 2014. So, I guess your statement above can also be applied to GM for providing a significant improvement at a relatively low cost to C7 customers. Also, there was 0 interest in doing anything for C6.
Summing it up, I can assure you in 2008 when I tuned many of these packages, I did not think I will purposely develop substandard calibrations so 11 years later I can retire, provide improvements based on my 2019 philosophy, and pocket the cash.
Thank you, Jim
In the 2000’s the technology of Magnetic Ride was relatively new. We were just cutting our teeth. Over 14 years, the flow of information lead us to continually revise philosophies and tuning strategies.
The final strip down and buildup of how we addressed damping was reflected during the development 2019 ZR1. This strategy was such an improvement, I retuned every 2019 Corvette model for production. 24 calibrations total.
The enhancements were so significant, that I convinced Service Parts Organization to make the 2019 calibrations available to anyone who owned a C7 back to 2014. So, I guess your statement above can also be applied to GM for providing a significant improvement at a relatively low cost to C7 customers. Also, there was 0 interest in doing anything for C6.
Summing it up, I can assure you in 2008 when I tuned many of these packages, I did not think I will purposely develop substandard calibrations so 11 years later I can retire, provide improvements based on my 2019 philosophy, and pocket the cash.
Thank you, Jim


Jim, thanks for the work you did on the later MRC systems!
Joe















