PXLpainter wrote:Hey Crispy Critter - where's that report that was pending...???
PART 1: (Front Tower Strut Brace - reprise)
....pulling into the drive, I can make out a longish cardboard box.... the TRD Rear Sway Bar and Front Tower Strut Brace, no doubt!
I slip into the house for a few minutes, playing it off like my family is my only focus in life.... for about 7 minutes, anyway.... after mumbling something about taking out the garbage to my wife, I slip back out and check out the BRIGHT RED powder coated bracing pieces... hmmmm... a glance under the rear linkage, and I can see that part will take a few minutes... so I grab a socket and Tower Strut Brace, and pop the hood.
10 minutes later, and the brace is in!
I pop back into the house, and mumble something about running to the local drive-thru... stopping to gaze under the hood by light of my mercury garage lamp, and then drop the lid with a grin, as I prepare to go thrash the chassis around for a few miles...
Upon transit out onto the road, several hundred yards up the way I cross the Ottawa River, and the barump....barump.... over the two seams sends back an immediate notion of rigidity improvement by way of a front end that is now "locked-in". Diving into the first swing-back right, I push the front into the apex and feel the reduced flex that previously haunted the front end under pressure. A quick run through the gears, and a detour out past the old steel over-hung girder truss bridge, and I wind it through second as the only local segment of quick handling reference comes up in a rush, my own personal chicane.... CP-e intake howling like a turbocharged shop-vac on steroids, the dynamic transitioning of point of load and inertia diversion plays the tune of a newfound melody rich with metaphorical handling rock after plushy pop had settled it's habit on my prior driving experience. After each brief stop, I found myself launching as hard as I could... from a dead-nuts-on aligned pull.... to a slight off angle punch.... and even half-lock turning launches, which twisted BOTH tires loose throught the balance of first and grabbed first traction slipping it's way through the clutch packs into second....
Car definitely leaves the line more constently with reduced torque steer and wheel hop, has a much firmer and noticably more rigid demeanor at high speeds, and braces the whole front end with greater authority than the rolled flatstock of the OEM bridge....
PART 2: (Rear Sway Bar) PENDING.... (gotta get a beer...)
-crisp
