A friend gave me some Bilstein B6s since he converted over to Meisters. I was initially going to use them for dimensions to build my custom setup and then send them to another good home. For the rears I decided to go ahead and take them apart and dyno them and revalve them and put them to use. The fronts will probably be up for sale when I am done, although kinda want to cut one of them open to see what the deal is inside. I think its a twin tube, unlike the other Bilstein dampers for our cars. Its crimped heavily, so I may not.
Anyway on with the business.
Had to make up an adapter to fit the shock on the dyno. Bilstein uses a 8mm thread on the end of the shaft. No idea why Ford did this. Its smaller than every other damper I have dyno'd.
Yes I ran the part number and it comes back as a B6.
Yes Bilstein Crimped the seal head in place and its "non serviceable". Assholes.
"Non servicable" won't stop me, only slow me down. LOL
It is a MONOTUBE. The B6/B8/B14 is a MONOTUBE, not a twin tube. Here is the proof:
I dynoed the one that is assembled still. It has less than 100lbs of rebound force at the zero number. That is normal production car shock valving, nothing special. I haven't had a chance to compare to the OE Ford shock yet. It has 66lbs of gas pressure and probably needs more as I was seeing some cavitation/hysteresis at the 10-20in/sec range on the compression side.
These were kind of a pain in the ass as I had to vent the gas first, then use the lathe to part off the upper portion of the shock below the crimp. I shortened the body by 1.5in, which isn't a big deal on a lowered car.
Anyway on with the business.
Had to make up an adapter to fit the shock on the dyno. Bilstein uses a 8mm thread on the end of the shaft. No idea why Ford did this. Its smaller than every other damper I have dyno'd.
Yes I ran the part number and it comes back as a B6.
Yes Bilstein Crimped the seal head in place and its "non serviceable". Assholes.
"Non servicable" won't stop me, only slow me down. LOL
It is a MONOTUBE. The B6/B8/B14 is a MONOTUBE, not a twin tube. Here is the proof:
I dynoed the one that is assembled still. It has less than 100lbs of rebound force at the zero number. That is normal production car shock valving, nothing special. I haven't had a chance to compare to the OE Ford shock yet. It has 66lbs of gas pressure and probably needs more as I was seeing some cavitation/hysteresis at the 10-20in/sec range on the compression side.
These were kind of a pain in the ass as I had to vent the gas first, then use the lathe to part off the upper portion of the shock below the crimp. I shortened the body by 1.5in, which isn't a big deal on a lowered car.
Last edited: