C5 Z06 Silver's Neomax coilovers initial settings?
I have a set of Silver's NEOMAX coilovers for my C5 Z06 on the way, planning to install as soon as they arrive. Removing the old leafs/shocks and bolting the new stuff in seems straightforward - however, there are a ton of different settings on these things, and I've never had coilovers before. I'm doing mainly Autocross and lighter road course events at Summit Point, and while I don't mind some rough feedback on the street it should still be at least street drivable for backroads on the weekend. Does anyone have a good resource on a starting point for where to set everything for the first few runs? Damping should be easy enough to tweak on the go since I got the remote adjusters, and I assume ride height will be obvious during install, but what about pre-load? What's a good "middle" to start with?
Also, forgive me if this is a really dumb question, but I'm reading a lot about corner balance when setting up coilovers. Does that not apply to a Z06 because it has near 50/50 weight distribution? Or is individual wheel balance different, should I grab a set of scales and learn that skill?
If you aren't scaling the car you are guessing. Your call. I set rough ride height based on where a car comes in and owner preference, they the scales tell me where to go. It's not about being 50/50 front to rear or side-to-side, it's about cross weight and then neutralizing the bars.
If you aren't scaling the car you are guessing. Your call. I set rough ride height based on where a car comes in and owner preference, they the scales tell me where to go. It's not about being 50/50 front to rear or side-to-side, it's about cross weight and then neutralizing the bars.
Good to know to just start at the middle, simple enough. I would hope that they're valved properly out of the box.
For the corner balancing, I might start with just guessing and measuring without the scales for now but thank you for clearing up what the intention is with it.
It's a little annoying because given the price-point, I figure there's about a 50/50 chance they're good vs crap.

Only two track days on mine so far, and one was in the rain, but they seem fine to me. But I was perfectly happy with the stock suspension (possibly with new shocks courtesy of the car's previous owner) and I've never experienced high-end dampers, so I'm not the best person to judge.
I have a set of Silver's NEOMAX coilovers for my C5 Z06 on the way, planning to install as soon as they arrive. Removing the old leafs/shocks and bolting the new stuff in seems straightforward - however, there are a ton of different settings on these things, and I've never had coilovers before. I'm doing mainly Autocross and lighter road course events at Summit Point, and while I don't mind some rough feedback on the street it should still be at least street drivable for backroads on the weekend. Does anyone have a good resource on a starting point for where to set everything for the first few runs? Damping should be easy enough to tweak on the go since I got the remote adjusters, and I assume ride height will be obvious during install, but what about pre-load? What's a good "middle" to start with?
Also, forgive me if this is a really dumb question, but I'm reading a lot about corner balance when setting up coilovers. Does that not apply to a Z06 because it has near 50/50 weight distribution? Or is individual wheel balance different, should I grab a set of scales and learn that skill?
Not many will have a suggestion on those particular coilovers as they are not normally the go-to for serious racers. They are as you said on the cheap end along with BC Racing which are more "in" with the stance crowd and drifters.
Generally speaking there is a minimum ride height to maintain to not kill the geometry of the stock arms/spindles (before going to drop spindles). I have kept to a ride height of 2 finger tire/fender gap in the front and a 3 finger tire/fender gap in the rear to keep a rake. Obviously VERY crude method but is a starting point before actually measuring at the jacking points for ride height.
Toss the shocks on in the "middle" settings and adjust from there. HOW much you adjust is based on how the shocks react to each click and how you like the car to feel.
Cheapest options I like are the Viking Performance setup. I got into mine for ~$1800 Warrior valving triple adjustable (to maintain some street manners) with 550 fr 600rr springs and was very happy with them. Before those were Ridetech HQ's but the adjustment method was irritating.
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