They had that special.....Big glass window...which I was looking through the entire time
They had that special.....Big glass window...which I was looking through the entire time
interesting.....Yeh just book it in....They did a good job. The bloke is a south african...just talk rugby with him and I'm sure he will fit you in
Hoyhoy.
That would be me.
http://www.vwwatercooled.org.au/foru...tml#post363904
Hooroo.
The "compensation" refers to vehicles fitted with the DSG, the car will sit on a slight lean towards the passenger side due to the added weight. To compensate this weight, you need to take axle-to-guard measurements, then weight the front and rear axles (rear in luggage compartment, front on the strut tower area) to get the car sitting level by adding the weight on the right side.
Torque is 70Nm plus a further 90 degree/quarter turn.
Stage 2+ Intercooler Carbon Intake Downpipe Swaybar DV+ Remsa.
Do you guys think it's necessary that I get an adjustment of my toe in/out after I install my coilovers?
The guy that I spoke to over the phone that is doing the installation seemed to know that the only adjustment in the Polo is the front toe and not the rear as it's not IRS. He told me that once we lower the car, then we should be doing the adjustment as a rule. It is however $49 for this toe adjustment.
Your comments?
MY13 Polo GTI | 5 Door | Candy White | Sunroof & Bi-Xenon Factory Options
raising/lowering the suspension pulls the steering arms in/out.
yes, you need to get it aligned but the $49 should also allow you to come back after the springs have settled & get it checked
carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums
I recently had my coilovers installed and the guy's understanding was that if you can't do a proper alignment on the Polo because of the subframe setup, then the only reason to do any toe adjustment was if you adjusted the camber by way of camber adjustable coilovers.
Make of that what you will. I'm not sure what to believe to be honest.
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