Thanks for the replies.
plohl wrote:I have put na6 bars in an na8.
With adjustable end links you'll be fine, regardless of bar.
From the discussion on Miatanet forum it seems that it's the reverse - NA8 bars on NA6 that seems to be the issue - although I would have thought the issue would be both ways. Perhaps it's actually a LHD/RHD issue?
plohl wrote:You'll have more issues if you you're running stupid low, or have silly high spring rates and big thick bars.
Standard ride height on the original 89 NA6 springs so maybe a bit of sag... Currently standard sway bars.
plohl wrote:What's the intended purpose of the car? I lean towards using the springs for most the balance, and the sways for just tuning depending on track and conditions.
If it's a road car, and your running springs close to standard rates, a bigger NA bar will be fine
It's a road registered special interest vehicle - so limited to 104 drives a year on public road. My wife and I both drive 4WD's as our daily vehicles so this is the 'fun' car that we share when were not needing to transport the kids etc. We live semi-rurally so there's a minimum of 500m of dirt track to leave home and then country (rough) backroads.
It's currently on (what I believe to be the original) NA6 springs with new base level KYB shocks, Flyin'Miata improved bump stops front and rear and Flyin'Miata NA rear shock top hats for extended shock travel - this setup combined with the factory NB 15" wheels (as I found performance tyre options to be non-existent in factory 14" sizes - running RE003's on the 15" - I've stuck with OEM wheels as they're cheap and not too bad in weight) is comfortable and absorbs the bumps well on these roads. Were I find it letting down is on spirited corners - there's a huge amount of body roll (and this is coming from someone who daily drives a 4WD with 3" lift and 33" tyres so is used to body roll as the norm), a feeling of reaching the limits and some rubbing sounds. I suppose I'm wondering if there's a way to find a balance between retaining the current comfortable ride quality that we currently have for these rougher roads whilst increasing corner performance to deal with some of the above mentioned - to do so am I better off with
1. firmer springs and appropriate shock absorbers (perhaps an entry level brand name set of coilovers?) to suit while retaining the current OEM swaybar combination, or
2. retaining the current spring and shock combination with aftermarket thicker (stiffer) swaybars.
I'm having difficulty understanding which option would have a better effect on the corner performance with the lesser effect on ride quality.
Reading both your post and magna_blue's it would seem that the pair of you in general recommend stiffer springs and softer swaybars?
On a less important note, PDA do track days and skid pan days locally which I'd like to go and have a play with - but this would just be for fun so I'm not looking to tailor the suspension towards this side activity...
plohl wrote:though I tend to steer clear of the 16mm rear bars.
Is that not required to balance the car back out if the front swaybar size has been increased? Not sure if I have it corretly, but on a RWD vehicle doesn't increasing the front swaybar result in understeer?
I look forward to your thoughts and comments.