The American wrote:The 10kg springs have 200mm free length, which is the same as the 6kg that came out.
Given what you are looking at, unless there is an installation issue, 200mm is too long. Logically, that makes sense - stiffer spring, car rides higher with no other changes. And you don't have the adjustment range to eliminate all of that increase in ride height.
Do the math. Those springs are 66% stiffer than what they replaced, so if the originals compressed (say) 50mm under static load, the new ones will compress less than 20mm (unless rising rate). On that example, 170mm free length might be pretty close, given the movement ratio and you want to move the perch up.
Another way of looking at is, how far did you have to move the spring perch? As you have (I gather) not been able to move it far enough, add that in, that will tell you what compressed length is excess, do the calc for how far it compresses under static load, and you can determine free length for that rate spring. Say the numbers are 20mm movement of perch height, you reckon (measure better) another 10mm needed, plus say 20mm static compression, you need a free length of 200mm less (20+10+20) = 150mm (hypothetically) to get your spring perch back to where it was. When you have done this calculation, check that under static load, you have enough spring compression to the compressed (or no) bump stop without coil binding.
Lots of people use helpers. Some don't. If you want to use them, you would need to subtract the compressed height of the helpers from your free length or just move your perch down (or a bit of both). To find out if you need them, how much droop do you have in shock travel from static loaded condition? If that is more than the static compression of the spring, the spring will be loose under full droop condition.
My 2c