Wow... Happy Thanksgiving everyone... what have I missed?
Okay, I'll give my side of the story and how "coilovers" or "Adjustable damping suspension" help improve performance.
First, lets get this out of the way.... The only thing that create traction on a car is the tires!
That four rubber ring is the only thing touching the ground, and all vehicle dynamic calculation are base off that, the tries.
So how do a good adjustable suspension give you better performance.
By allowing the driver to adjust to get the most out of the tires as well as the road surfaces.
So for now, lets assume that we are all going to be using good sport compound road tires, what you would expect from the factory from Ford.
Ford have to make a suspension that work to as many people as possible, because they are not adjustable.
That mean from the enthusiast who is going to autocross the car, to the old lady who want to go shopping with it with a car that got all the option.
It need to have ground clearance for really bad area and speed humps, it needs to be low enough so the car don't drive like a SUV.
You can see, there are alot of "opposite" thing that Ford is asking the suspension to do.
So with an adjustable suspension, you have 2 advantage.
1. You can use higher springs rate than OEM.
2. You have an adjustable damper so you can dial in the damping force to take advantage of those higher springs rate.
The reason we can use a higher springs rate is because we are pairing it with an adjustable damper.
Ford couldn't use this high springs rate because there are too many compromise and no adjustable damper, so it sort of have to strike the middle ground for everything.
Using a higher springs rate, but a damper that you can dial in a lower damping force mean you have a springs setup that will produce less body movement.
The adjustable damper on softer setting will allow the suspension to move, this in term create compliancy over uneven road surfaces as well as comfort.
With the adjustable damper on stiff setting, this will take advantage of the higher springs rate, control the body movement, and force more pressure onto the tires.
This provider crisp turn in, better response, as well as better traction as you are forcing the tires to work harder.
As a driver, you can toggle between this two setting to your personal preference.
I have driver who like to ride on the street on full stiff... I find that harsh, but they like the response.
Is softer better? or is harder better? There isn't a real answer to that, because that is all up to the driver preference.
Having ability to adjust to the drive preference is the main advantage of an adjustable suspension system.
If you guys are looking for numbers, chances are performance suspension vs. OEM will have minimal difference.
Because in the end, if everyone is on the same ground in the same weather on the same tires... chances are there are limited difference.
However, if you throw 2 car on the track for an 8 hours endurance race, you will see how a good suspension that are tune to the driver preference out perform an OEM suspension.
Because when you are confident, as well as driving a car that is predictable, that is where you start to produce better lap time.
So in conclusion, it isn't all about the numbers.
It is about HOW the car feels when you are driving it on a suspension that at tune to your preference.
Are you going to be 2 second faster in a lap... maybe, maybe not.
But I know the driver will have alot more fun and confidence driving a car on a good adjustable suspension vs the OEM setup; and chances are you will be faster vs. the OEM setup.
Jerrick