I love the Daizen Bushings!!
#46
I did not notice a harsher ride, or more noise from doing the rear's. The car does not squat as much under initial acceleration as much, but that is due to the Supra Twin Turbo springs/shocks I'm sure.
Once I finally do the turbo system, I will prefer having the tighter suspension, and consider the noise a necessary evil for a 500+ horsepower car.
Once I finally do the turbo system, I will prefer having the tighter suspension, and consider the noise a necessary evil for a 500+ horsepower car.
#48
Pole Position
Originally posted by nextlevelcoupe
yeah but is the ride in the rear harsh after doing the upper rear bushings?
yeah but is the ride in the rear harsh after doing the upper rear bushings?
CEO
P.S. "NEXT " you still got that steering wheel.....
#49
Pole Position
Guys,
This is an interesting thread. I had the front Daizens put in (upper and lower) and at the same time did the shocks and springs (one inch drop). The car corners great, but the ride can be a bit jolting or bouncy on irregular road surfaces. It is not the smooth rolling bounce feel you get in a car that is too soft, but a bunch of small jolts in different directions. Although I do like the performance characteristics, if I were to do it all over again, I would give up some of the performance for a smoother ride. I would be willing to spend a few hundred more to soften it up a bit, but I don't want to drop any big $ here (i.e. I'd prefer to stay on the lower side of $500). Any suggestions?
Here is the configuration for my '93 SC400:
Bushings - Daizen Front (upper and lower), part# S1-2002, Rear is stock
- Daizen Sway Bar Bushing Set, part# S1-2008
Springs - Eibach Pro Kit, Part# 8230.140
Shocks - Tokico, Front-HU3452, Rear HU3453
Tires - 16" Pontonza S03 on stock rims
Installation done by TM Engineering
Thanks,
Ryan
This is an interesting thread. I had the front Daizens put in (upper and lower) and at the same time did the shocks and springs (one inch drop). The car corners great, but the ride can be a bit jolting or bouncy on irregular road surfaces. It is not the smooth rolling bounce feel you get in a car that is too soft, but a bunch of small jolts in different directions. Although I do like the performance characteristics, if I were to do it all over again, I would give up some of the performance for a smoother ride. I would be willing to spend a few hundred more to soften it up a bit, but I don't want to drop any big $ here (i.e. I'd prefer to stay on the lower side of $500). Any suggestions?
Here is the configuration for my '93 SC400:
Bushings - Daizen Front (upper and lower), part# S1-2002, Rear is stock
- Daizen Sway Bar Bushing Set, part# S1-2008
Springs - Eibach Pro Kit, Part# 8230.140
Shocks - Tokico, Front-HU3452, Rear HU3453
Tires - 16" Pontonza S03 on stock rims
Installation done by TM Engineering
Thanks,
Ryan
#50
The only suggestion I'd put out, is to just replace the uppers with stock arms, which will be right in the $500 range. The hard ride probably comes from the upgraded shocks & springs, so you would need to go back to stock to relieve the jostling ride. Performance will almost always loose some of the comfort, so...
#51
Ok question for you guys maybe you might know this Ryan. I have a 98 Sc400 with 75k on it and I get a slight vibration at highway speeds and a noticable poping in the front end when going slow speeds or turning at slow speeds.
I bought the following to freshen up my ride and give it some more performance feel
Bushings - Daizen Front (upper and lower) S1-2002A
Daizen Sway Bar Bushing Set S1-2008A
Springs - Eibach Pro Kit, Part# 8230.140
Shocks - Tokico, Front-HU3452, Rear HU3453
I am running 18" Moda R6's with 245/40/18 front and 275/35/18 rear
My question is what to do since I haven't started I am torn as what to do and or replace now. I haven't gotten into the car to see exactly what is bad but I don't want to replace everything and ruin the cars ride. If I just do the sway bar bushings and the lower control arms will I be better off. I guess I really need to see what all bushings are bad on the car too.
I bought the following to freshen up my ride and give it some more performance feel
Bushings - Daizen Front (upper and lower) S1-2002A
Daizen Sway Bar Bushing Set S1-2008A
Springs - Eibach Pro Kit, Part# 8230.140
Shocks - Tokico, Front-HU3452, Rear HU3453
I am running 18" Moda R6's with 245/40/18 front and 275/35/18 rear
My question is what to do since I haven't started I am torn as what to do and or replace now. I haven't gotten into the car to see exactly what is bad but I don't want to replace everything and ruin the cars ride. If I just do the sway bar bushings and the lower control arms will I be better off. I guess I really need to see what all bushings are bad on the car too.
#52
After seeing everyones experiences, Im leaning toward someones suggestion of using the supra lower control arms. They are supposed to be a direct fit, can anyone confirm this? I have a '95 sc300.
#53
Pole Position
Originally posted by 98LexSc400
Ok question for you guys maybe you might know this Ryan. I have a 98 Sc400 with 75k on it and I get a slight vibration at highway speeds and a noticable poping in the front end when going slow speeds or turning at slow speeds.
I bought the following to freshen up my ride and give it some more performance feel
Bushings - Daizen Front (upper and lower) S1-2002A
Daizen Sway Bar Bushing Set S1-2008A
Springs - Eibach Pro Kit, Part# 8230.140
Shocks - Tokico, Front-HU3452, Rear HU3453
I am running 18" Moda R6's with 245/40/18 front and 275/35/18 rear
My question is what to do since I haven't started I am torn as what to do and or replace now. I haven't gotten into the car to see exactly what is bad but I don't want to replace everything and ruin the cars ride. If I just do the sway bar bushings and the lower control arms will I be better off. I guess I really need to see what all bushings are bad on the car too.
Ok question for you guys maybe you might know this Ryan. I have a 98 Sc400 with 75k on it and I get a slight vibration at highway speeds and a noticable poping in the front end when going slow speeds or turning at slow speeds.
I bought the following to freshen up my ride and give it some more performance feel
Bushings - Daizen Front (upper and lower) S1-2002A
Daizen Sway Bar Bushing Set S1-2008A
Springs - Eibach Pro Kit, Part# 8230.140
Shocks - Tokico, Front-HU3452, Rear HU3453
I am running 18" Moda R6's with 245/40/18 front and 275/35/18 rear
My question is what to do since I haven't started I am torn as what to do and or replace now. I haven't gotten into the car to see exactly what is bad but I don't want to replace everything and ruin the cars ride. If I just do the sway bar bushings and the lower control arms will I be better off. I guess I really need to see what all bushings are bad on the car too.
#55
I asked for TT parts,but not sure if there's a difference,the front sways are the same between na, and TT.
The rear control arms are different,they're longer on the SC, but I've heard that you can use the entire rear subframe from a Supra, which would allow the use of the Supra parts.
I've thought about that one, would get the brakes and all.
The rear control arms are different,they're longer on the SC, but I've heard that you can use the entire rear subframe from a Supra, which would allow the use of the Supra parts.
I've thought about that one, would get the brakes and all.
#56
Lexus Test Driver
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a-arms
Hi, I just finished putting Supra NA front lower control arms on my stock 92 SC300. I paid about $190.00 each for them, Lexus dealer wanted about $560 each for theirs. Holy sh@@#$%^t! The Supra lower front a-arms are a purfect fit. Did the work myself, just a shade tree mechanic, with simple tools.Ride is firmer than the Lexus bushings(should soften with age), alittle more rattle(very little actually), but more sporty. Diffinitely not as firm as I suspect the Diazen bushing are. I highly recommend this change over ,unless you have the big bucks and want the original verrrrrry smooth Lexus ride. I see no reason why these would not fit on the 95SC. In my opinion, Supra NA lower front control a-arms are the way to fix those worn out Lexus front lower control a-arms at a fraction of the cost of Lexus parts!
#60
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After driving to school the first time, there is an overpass that changes from one highway to another. Before I did the bushing change, the maximum speed I could do before the tires would squeal a bit would be 36 mph (on my speedo). After I did the bushings, I could do it at 41 mph. This is on Pirelli P4000's? 215/60 r15, and the tire pressures should have been the same (I do about 33 front, 29 rear). Now I'm not sure if it is accurate to say that the bushings did this because the temperature (of the road and air) is a lot colder than before. And tire squealing doesn't mean you're at the limit, it just means you're pretty close to it. When the tires screech, I believe you're at the limit.