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Old 01-12-2013, 01:28 PM   #1
Doug1227
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Default Strange vs. Koni Yellow Adjustables

I ran Strange Adjustables on my Fox. Any reason the ones for 05-10 wouldn't work fine on my '12? They're about $200+ cheaper than Koni Yellows. Will the Strange do ok on a lowered vehicle? Any reason I should pick one over the other? I do plan on drag racing the car, and probably won't ever road race it, but do want to be able to adjust for street driving vs. the track,etc. Speak up!
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Old 01-12-2013, 04:03 PM   #2
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The Koni yellows do very well with lowered cars. I'll send you a pm in afterwards on pricing. I have the yellows on my Boss right now, they offer a hefty range of adjustability and paired with the right Springs (BMR) they would do very well at the track. The BMR rear spring rate I beleive is right at 160ish, so with the adjustability you could easily run at the track and on the street.
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Old 01-12-2013, 09:37 PM   #3
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The strange will be a better fit for your application. The koni are valved more towards handling. You can only adjust the compression on either set, but the koni rebound are not so much drag friendly.
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Old 01-12-2013, 09:43 PM   #4
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That's kinda the feedback I'm wanting. I'm looking for something that ranges from a little bit stiffer than stock since I'm lowered to pretty loose up front for at the track. Car will eventually be supercharged, so traction will become an issue at some point.
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Old 01-12-2013, 10:37 PM   #5
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All I do is race mine, and daily it to work and back sometimes. I'm thinking of going with the Lakewood 70/30 combo - http://www.latemodelrestoration.com/...Drag-Strut-Kit

Daily driving on the 70/30s isn't too bad, but the 90/10s are a bit scary on the street.
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Old 01-13-2013, 02:11 AM   #6
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I've been wondering the exact same thing about the Strange shocks, I'll be doing more drag racing than anything else and they are significantly cheaper. Downtime, have you read any reviews about the Lakewood's, those don't look bad either.

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Old 01-13-2013, 04:50 AM   #7
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Originally Posted by Toby View Post
The strange will be a better fit for your application. The koni are valved more towards handling. You can only adjust the compression on either set, but the koni rebound are not so much drag friendly.
this is pretty much what ive read about them.

most likely will be going with the strange all around with some sportline springs.

the lakewoods look interesting, i'll have to read up on them too.
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Old 01-13-2013, 11:49 AM   #8
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Originally Posted by Luke View Post
I've been wondering the exact same thing about the Strange shocks, I'll be doing more drag racing than anything else and they are significantly cheaper. Downtime, have you read any reviews about the Lakewood's, those don't look bad either.
Not these in particular, but they've been around for years. I used Lakewood stuff 30 years ago back in high school.
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Old 01-13-2013, 11:59 AM   #9
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Yeah I meant with these cars, I've looked a little through SVTP but haven't seen many people running them. I've had Lakewood and Strange stuff on previous cars, no complaints on those.
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Old 01-13-2013, 01:06 PM   #10
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Originally Posted by Luke View Post
Yeah I meant with these cars, I've looked a little through SVTP but haven't seen many people running them. I've had Lakewood and Strange stuff on previous cars, no complaints on those.
They've only been out a short time for our cars. For the price, I think it's going to be hard to beat them. Won't have the infinite adjustability of the others, but then, that's why I don't run coil overs. Kind of a set it and forget it kind of guy! LOL!
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Old 01-14-2013, 01:13 AM   #11
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Originally Posted by pohnjarker View Post
this is pretty much what ive read about them.

most likely will be going with the strange all around with some sportline springs.

the lakewoods look interesting, i'll have to read up on them too.
honestly that would be a terrible mis match setup. If you plan to do any drag racing, sportline springs are about the worst spring you can get. They set the car very low, the spring rate is very stiff, they do not allow for a good weight transfer. i would look more into maybe a steeda ultralite spring for a general spring. They have a better rate that will allow for better weight transfer but also give a nice stance.
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Old 01-14-2013, 01:29 AM   #12
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Originally Posted by Toby View Post
honestly that would be a terrible mis match setup. If you plan to do any drag racing, sportline springs are about the worst spring you can get. They set the car very low, the spring rate is very stiff, they do not allow for a good weight transfer. i would look more into maybe a steeda ultralite spring for a general spring. They have a better rate that will allow for better weight transfer but also give a nice stance.
my mistake, i meant the pro kit springs, not the sportline...i get them mixed up sometimes.

i have also been looking at the ultralites for a while now.

i have a few months until i need to make a decision since id like to put it all on in May, or, if i can get the wife to take it to TS, i'll have it done before i get home so i dont have to worry about all of that like i did last month with the Paxton install. took way more time than i planned and the wife wasnt happy.
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Old 01-14-2013, 03:18 AM   #13
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I have the Pro kit on mine and I can usually cut decent 60 ft's (1.6x pretty regularly). I'm thinking about replacing them with the Drag Launch kit since that's all I really do with the car anymore.
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Old 01-14-2013, 04:15 AM   #14
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Originally Posted by Toby View Post
honestly that would be a terrible mis match setup. If you plan to do any drag racing, sportline springs are about the worst spring you can get. They set the car very low, the spring rate is very stiff, they do not allow for a good weight transfer. i would look more into maybe a steeda ultralite spring for a general spring. They have a better rate that will allow for better weight transfer but also give a nice stance.
Damn I didn't know sport lines suck for drag.
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Originally Posted by SlowGreyGT View Post
I agree. A stick car shocks the tires MUCH harder and does it several times going down the track. With a big power stick car, the car is much more unsettled going down the track making it more of a challenge to ET well. A well running auto car is nothing more than just point and shoot. Which is great for a track car taking a lot of driver error out of the equation.
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Old 01-14-2013, 10:58 AM   #15
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Originally Posted by BLK2012GT View Post
Damn I didn't know sport lines suck for drag.
They don't suck. lol. They may not be the perfect ideal drag springs for the track, but you can still get them to hook hard and still have a nice drive on the street. A drag set up on a street car fucking sucks to drive around town. It's sloppy, nose dives and lifts just under regular driving conditions, floats on the highway etc. My buddy Mike gets his car to pull 1.5's on Sportlines. You can also look on SVTP and there is plenty of guys hitting good 60's on Sportlines.
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