Not sure who you have contacted yet....if you havent already then try Volksmuller on Annangrove Rd
They installed my coilovers at a very reasonable price and set them to a perfect height....highly recommended
Not an urgent modification for me yet but MUST be done in the near future.
Just need to find a decent shop to install my Eibach lowering springs. Prefer the workshop to be reliable, reasonable labour rate and aren't sloppy.
Some shops are asking for a whole days labour $550-$680 to install them. The last time I paid to install springs was about 6 years ago, took under 2 hours for all 4 and cost $180 labour..
~35mm drop front and back with 235/35 R19.
MY11 B7 Passat 125TDi Highline
Pearl Mocca Anthracite | Electric and Heated Leather | Folding Mirrors | Sunroof | Adaptive Lighting Package | Footwell Lighting | Park Assist 2 | Lane Assist | RNS510 | R36 Pedals | Scirocco MFSW | Front Lip | 20" Suzuka Wheels | H&R Springs | De-Badged | VCDS Mods | Alpine Mono and 8" Subwoofer
Not sure who you have contacted yet....if you havent already then try Volksmuller on Annangrove Rd
They installed my coilovers at a very reasonable price and set them to a perfect height....highly recommended
Rears will take 40 minutes tops (probably 30m) say $60-80 depending on hrly rate
Fronts will take 3 hrs tops - say $300 - $360
Ideally you'll get a wheel alignment afterwards - $60 for a shonky one. $100-$140 for a decent one.
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
Yeah, that's what I thought.
I've been asking 'prestige' workshops.
I might ask the VW mechanic at Giraween, he knows his stuff and isn't a con like other shops.
Why is there such price range for wheel alignment? I thought all shops who do the laser alignment are petty much the same?
There's a few good independants up near where you are. You've said one & Volksmuller has a good rep too.
Why the difference in prices? For a start, ask to see the "technicians" MVRIC licence. I think you'll find a fair few cheap places aren't using qualified mechanics - maybe they are perfectly good at their job & have years of experience but maybe they haven't seen an alignment machine until the week before.
Some places churn through alignments (1 booking every 15-20 minutes) & only play with the factory adjustments & then only if they are outside the green area. eg: If the LHS camber is -0.75 & the RHS is -1.00 & this is within spec they'll leave it rather than try & get the RHS camber less than the LHS.
The good guys will have a fiddle with so-called non-adjustable items (eg: ball joint nuts, knuckle joint mounts, sub-frames, strut top mounts) to try & get the ideal setting. They will also be willing to adjust within the green range to achieve an optimum result rather than near enough being good enough & through years of experience will have settings that they use that are outside the green zone but stop tyre wear or the vehicle drifting. I used to have a unique set of alignment settings & tyre pressures for 1970s Mercedes, 1970s Taragos, Holdens, Falcons & Valiants that were nothing like factory. One of the reasons I got a job working on aircraft was because the interviewer was an ex-client & I was the only person he knew that could stop the tyre wear on his fleet of 5 Geminis (Geminis used to wear on both the inside & outside of the tread - partly because GMH recommended 26psi all round for the 145r13 tyres).
As an indication, the Guy at Spinning Wheel had my mate's Polo up on the alignment hoist 3 times getting the alignment as close to perfect as possible - supposedly Polos aren't alignable beyond front toe so I assume he was having a fiddle with non-adjustable items asnobody could stuff-up the toe 3 times in a row.
If I was still doing alignments I'd be hitting people up for $100+ per alignment as well. peanuts/monkeys/etc
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
Back when I was a lad we used a piece of string around the back wheel stretched to the front wheel to do the alignment. How times have changed.
Cheers
(Really old) Paul
Any ideas what I could do if I'm not 100% satisfied with the height once the springs are installed. The Eibach are a fixed height drop (I don't want KMac or King Springs, I know they can be matched to be the same hub to guard measurement front and rear)
I don't want to fork out the cash for coil overs but I just want the front and rear hub to guard to be the same, I don't want the rear to sit on the tyres and the front to be 10mm above, I'd rather both have the same space.. Not sure if I'm explaining it clearly??
-Obvious thing would be to grind them to sit the same height BUT it's not a VL or corolla lol
MY11 B7 Passat 125TDi Highline
Pearl Mocca Anthracite | Electric and Heated Leather | Folding Mirrors | Sunroof | Adaptive Lighting Package | Footwell Lighting | Park Assist 2 | Lane Assist | RNS510 | R36 Pedals | Scirocco MFSW | Front Lip | 20" Suzuka Wheels | H&R Springs | De-Badged | VCDS Mods | Alpine Mono and 8" Subwoofer
If they are too high you can get them reset lower. If they are too low you're buggered as "stretching"the spring is usually only temporary.
The springs settle a bit too - so if they look a bit tall at first they could drop a bit more in the first 12 months.
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
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