love your consistency Wes, same you said last time. Pics were just at a friend's driveway. Could get some nice pictures where I live (Cape Cod, MA), maybe I'll get some now that summer is here.elwesso wrote:Looks nice, but you could use a little more tire, or a little less fender gap
I agree but I'd say and instead of "or".elwesso wrote:Looks nice, but you could use a little more tire, or a little less fender gap
Excellent!!!paranoidjack wrote:BUT I refuse to compromise ride quality for looks
THANKS man for that analogy. A guy I know has one, I will get a ride with him this week and see what I think.Falkdesigns wrote:Looks great man! Personally, I would NEVER trade the way my Q rides with Tein & KYB SR's back for the mushy stock ride. If you go for a ride in an M5, you'll get a good idea of how the Q rides with the Tein/KYB combo.
Thanks Jeff! Man Nico is really such a great wealth of knowledge/people...my previous prelude forum (albeit very comprehensive), is full of 17 year olds that couldn't change a caliper if they had too. I sincerely appreciate all of the info you guys are putting out and I will paint my calipers the next time I have the wheels off.Jeff Williams wrote:Jack, the car looks great! Don't listen to Wes, he just wants everybody to do what he has done.
The ride quality of a lowered Q is really not bad. The tires make all the difference. I bet you hear/feel road grooves and bridge edges a lot more with those low profile tires.
Lowering the car will just make it more stable at highway speeds, unless you go to the weeds like OTG.
Falks car looks great lowered.
I gree with the detailing tip from Andy, but I would take it a step further. Take off the weel. Remove the calipers, like you were doing a brake job. Buy a caliper paint kit fron Advance Auto (less than $10) It has cleaner and a brush-on paint. Get a REAL paintbursh. Then paint the calipers gloss black. While you are at Advance Auto, buy a spray can of dark grey metallic paint. I think it is called cast iron or something. It has a little sparkle to it. Paint the caliper brackets and rotor hub that color for contrast. It will make the wheels pop! Then clean and polish the inside of the wheels, to give depth to the whole set-up. You will spend 4 hours doing this, but it will look like a show car when you are done. If you really want to, you can get some gunk and clean up the inner fender wells, struts, and springs while you are in there.
Here is another tip: make a nice photocopy of the INFINITI badge and lettering. Scale it to fit the calipers, then go to the nearest BIG flea market. There are usually somebody there with a vinyl cutter. You can get silver Infiniti lettering for the calipers, that would look cool. You can also get a sticker with the logo to cover the center caps of the wheels, so they look OEM.
Keep up the good work!
Well, I called Joe yesterday to find out about shocks. DAMN. I have the sport/regular mode (anniversary/T edition), which makes each OEM $387 bucks. The regular ones are only $187, but I would lose my sport mode. I really don't know what to do.BadQ45t wrote:As for prices, you can jump on the set of springs Falk has left, I think he has one pair, they are under 300. The KYBs are tougher to get, OneTonGarage got them for me, but they were like 700 bones. You will have to pony up about 500 for stock replacements anyways.
I did it to my 97 and it does ride low, I have to remember to go slow over some speed bumps but going around a freeway clover leaf is like night and day. The car just hugs the road, feels like the front end just hunkers down in a big way.
Once you get past 60k everything is pretty much done and you should at least get new shocks/struts. You could try to get the KYB SR Specials and not lower and get alot from just that upgrade.
Nice Q BTW, I usually think of east coast cars at least in the north east as getting ugly really quick!