Originally Posted by
K1W1
Brad I would have thought that if you had done lifts on Brumbys you would know the problems with lifting front drive vehicles and how quickly you kill CV joints. Sure the suspension sags when you lift a car up just like it compresses when you hit a bump but the drive train is not designed you run for tens of thousands of kms at the upper or lower end of the suspension travel. It's designed to work at the factory ride height. Holdens, Fords, Toyota Hiluxes and Valiants are entirely different beasts with completely different drive trains and suspension set ups from modern all independent, front drive oriented car style vehicles.
I'd love to see an Outback or Scout style AWD Superb Wagon I think it could be a good seller in Australia but seeing as the AWD is only offered as the premium product in the range I can't see Skoda suddenly putting it on the diesel variant with a lower spec level which is where most of the potential sales would be.
yeah, the CVs die a bit quicker, but these guys that wanted lift were killing lots of other things as well.....
Let's face it, Skoda offer -15mm (125mm clearance) as a factory option on the base Octavia (140mm clearance). The Scout is +40mm (180mm clearance) isn't it? I really doubt there are any changes beyond springs & strut housings. LCAs, CVs, etc would be the same between the scout & the (now discontinued in Australia) 4x4.
I would still be happy adding +25mm springs with an uprated spring rate.
I think a Superb "Scout" would have all the bells & whistles & still be a V6 - a luxury SUV.
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