Alfa Romeo/Alfa Romeo Digest Archive

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: Initial setting for Koni sports



As I said in the first place this comes from the "horse's mouth". The guys here who distribute Konis are the people quoted. Amongst other comments they made, they specifically stated that the reason Konis are adjustable is to take up wear, an added bonus is that the adjustment can be useful for changing the ride characteristics of cars. This is of particular use for track cars, where some tracks require a firmer suspension setup than others, instead of swapping springs etc. you can sometimes adjust the shocks enough. The particular products they stressed for these applications are externally adjustable.

Standard type shocks (red and yellow, for Koni), which are great for road use are adjustable for wear, you need different rebound etc. for different road surfaces, so adjusting the shocks to the settings you describe would provide for a firmer ride, and probably better handling in most circumstances, and is probably the way to go, but that's not the reason the shocks were engineered that way.

According to the charts the Koni guys showed us the red shocks in full soft are harder than most OEM supplied shocks, the Yellows in full soft are about half way through the adjustment range of the reds. I have a 105 series Alfa with Koni reds 1/2 way in the front and full soft in the rear, with harder shorter springs. This seems to work well for my car, but others may like it harder. As you can see a lot of setting up suspension is a matter of taste and potential use.

Cheers
Stuart
On Thursday, June 20, 2002, at 06:44 PM, Chris Sweetapple wrote:


It simply isn't correct that Konis are adjustable to take up wear, the
whole point of them being adjustable is so that the driver can make changes
to achieve a better ride/handling compromise. Wear has nothing to do with
it, in fact in my experience Konis pretty much last forever. Forgive my
ignorance but I think a Verde is some form of Milano or 75 as we call them,
in which case I have little experience of these, but if I was selling a set
of Koni Sports to someone with a 105/115-Series road car, I'd advise him to
start with the Konis screwed up about 2/3 of the way (quite hard) on the
front and about 1/3, maybe even less (in other words quite soft) on the
rear.

Chris Sweetapple
Highwood Motor Company
Swansea, U.K.
www.highwoodalfa.com

Message text written by INTERNET:alfa@domain.elided

Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 11:22:05 +1000
From: Stuart Thomson <stuart.thomson@domain.elided>
Subject: Damien's Koni's

Hi All,

According to our local Koni distributor, who spoke at the club meeting
last week, the Koni shocks are set at the factory for standard
suspension, no adjustment necessary.  The adjustment mechanism is there
to take up wear only.  Usually they are set at full soft (which is
generally harder than the stock, worn? dampers).  So take em out of the
box and bolt em on.

Cheers
Stuart
On Wednesday, June 19, 2002, at 05:57 AM, alfa-digest wrote:

From: "Crane, Damien" <Damien.Crane@domain.elided>
Subject: Initial setting for Koni sports

Greetings to all

I have a quick question.  I just got some much need Koni Sports for my
88
Verde.  Assuming that I have stock springs, does anyone have a
suggestion
for an initial setting to match those springs, either in # of turns
or % of
the way from soft to hard?    (or maybe they are correctly preset from
Koni?)
<<
--
to be removed from alfa, see /bin/digest-subs.cgi
or email "unsubscribe alfa" to majordomo@domain.elided


Home | Archive | Main Index | Thread Index