wait a minute, this kit actually increases front pro lift geometry, not anti lift.@davemarco I still haven’t installed mines yet because I’m waiting to receive the Spoon zero bump steer kit, but someone else has installed the Whiteline anti lift kit:
Ive had them on my car for months now actually. Nice changeMan, three pages in and no one has installed these? I just ordered a set for my car.
Any effect on wheel hop? Does it improve traction powering out of turns? Can you describe the effects? It seems pretty hard to get a straight answer on what these actually do. Some of what people have said they do does not line up with the theory of how they should work.Ive had them on my car for months now actually. Nice change
I don’t know if there is an easy quantifiable difference. The steering felt a lot better after. I only got to do one track day on them before everything shut Down but the car definitely felt good. It’s going to be very minor so unless you’re tracking the car on top level tires don’t expect to see much change probably. If you’re just trying to launch the car on the street from a stop light I’d recommend the rear transmission mount I noticed a bigger difference there.Any effect on wheel hop? Does it improve traction powering out of turns? Can you describe the effects? It seems pretty hard to get a straight answer on what these actually do. Some of what people have said they do does not line up with the theory of how they should work.
Thanks for any clarity you can offer.
I don’t know if there is an easy quantifiable difference. The steering felt a lot better after. I only got to do one track day on them before everything shut Down but the car definitely felt good. It’s going to be very minor so unless you’re tracking the car on top level tires don’t expect to see much change probably. If you’re just trying to launch the car on the street from a stop light I’d recommend the rear transmission mount I noticed a bigger difference there.
I’d definitely do them again just don’t expect a huge difference. crisp steering and nice turn in would be my review.
Yes, those are compliance bushings.Are the bushings in the ALK known as compliance bushings? If so, they're 10% stiffer in the 2020. Kinda cool that Honda is making an improvement from the factory.
https://hondanews.com/en-US/honda-a...nsing-and-new-logr-datalogging-smartphone-app
I just installed these and they are a nice addition to the car. I haven't had the chance to really "test" them yet, but to this point, like @.grimace stated, I would not expect a massive difference, and if wheel hop is what you are worried about, upgrading the rear transmission torque mount is your best bet.
That being said, maybe you would feel more of a difference if you are still on the stock transmission mount. Either way, I would def do them again, car does feel really solid on turn in and from what i can tell there is no added NVH, but again I have a Hasport torque mount, and that already added NVH.
Not the right thread, but I also installed the spoon rigid collars and in my eyes they are an absolute must. It is amazing how much less the imperfections in the road transmit to the body of the car. You just feel the suspension absorbing everything, like it should. It also helped me get my alignment perfect. Prior to the rigid collars, the I was at 2.7 degrees of negative camber on the driver side front, and 1.7 degrees of negative camber on the passenger side. Now both sides are exactly 1.7. I would recommend them to everyone and I will be installing them on my S2000 for sure.