briggy wrote:
I've given this some thought after chatting to someone at work who knows a thing or two about cars in general.
First of all, the dampers are not there to control the height of the car. That's the job of the springs. So dampers will normally be as extended as necessary to make the distance between where they're mounted at the top and the bottom. When I attempt to compress them, there's a reasonable amount of resistance, which makes me think they are doing their job.
Also, as MJL944 pointed out, their default position could never be fully extended as they wouldn't fit in the packaging box, which is about 4 inches extended.
Finally, now that I've cycled one of them a few times, the default position is now almost at the top of the box.
Not heard back from OPC today, so will report back when they reply.
If only we had some newly manufactured ones to compare to....
Cheers,
Bryan
You're right about the height of the car but... if, at normal ride height, the damper rods are in an extended position, well beyond where they start providing resistance to movement, they they will be doing nothing. Interesting that the "default" position has moved now - does this mean the resistance to compression is significant at this point now?
Of course you could get the shocks tested - can't imagine it would cost a huge amount? maybe someone like Centre Gravity could advise where to send them if they can't test themselves? Would put an end to our speculation & give you peace of mind.