How to make a fiero handle?
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How to make a fiero handle?
Well I found some pretty sweet driver's roads around here today and really had a good time. So now I've got my suspension on my mind instead of hp. So what kind aftermarket is out there for the 84-87 suspension? I know upgrading the sway bar and adding one in the rear is supposed to make a big difference, but what size bars would be the best to go with? Anyway all comments and info is welcome.
Srock 23mm front and back
Held Coil over rear w/ bump steer correction
RCC Front coil over and tubular a arms
Poly everywhere
Aluminum cradle bushings
Thats as good as a stock 84-87 can get. Dont forget to upgrade your brakes too.
Held Coil over rear w/ bump steer correction
RCC Front coil over and tubular a arms
Poly everywhere
Aluminum cradle bushings
Thats as good as a stock 84-87 can get. Dont forget to upgrade your brakes too.
Resident Import Elitist
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1991 Skyline GTR
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1991 Skyline GTR
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Check out http://www.heldmotorsports.com/
A more direct link to what ur looking for http://www.heldmotorsports.com/Fiero/Fiero-Poly.htm
A more direct link to what ur looking for http://www.heldmotorsports.com/Fiero/Fiero-Poly.htm
1998 Mustang GT

You can't piss on what you can't catch.

You can't piss on what you can't catch.
yes, rear sway bar does alot. the size depends on how you like to drive. the stock front in back is OK, but it really cuts down on jacking points.
lowering springs is good. drops the center of gravity + stiffer springs + some new shocks/struts
anythign you can do to tighten rear. cradle bushings & a-arm bushings - no rubber.
braking is a HUGE part of handling.
the bumpsteer is nothing to worry about. once you get the rear tightened up, you'll see its nothing to waste $$$ on.
dont get to wrapped up in throwing money at the suspension. while its fun to brag about the super cool this's & that's, handling is mostly tires & driver.
lowering springs is good. drops the center of gravity + stiffer springs + some new shocks/struts
anythign you can do to tighten rear. cradle bushings & a-arm bushings - no rubber.
braking is a HUGE part of handling.
the bumpsteer is nothing to worry about. once you get the rear tightened up, you'll see its nothing to waste $$$ on.
dont get to wrapped up in throwing money at the suspension. while its fun to brag about the super cool this's & that's, handling is mostly tires & driver.
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The BEST thing you can do for your car's handling is go WIDE on the rear wheels and tires. This will improve both controlability and limts.
Beyond that, improve controllability first before you do anything else to improve limits. Poly or aluminum cradle bushings are a necessity, as are poly or UHMW rear control arm bushings.
Change one thing at a time and evaluate the change before you go into other things.
Beyond that, improve controllability first before you do anything else to improve limits. Poly or aluminum cradle bushings are a necessity, as are poly or UHMW rear control arm bushings.
Change one thing at a time and evaluate the change before you go into other things.
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Thanks for the advice guys. I know its hard to admit for some of us, but one thing I definitly need to improve is my driving skill. Thats the fun part though. I was planning to put some fresh tires, and maybe wheels too on my fiero soon so I'll keep cornering in mind. I know that light wheels can help alot with having less unsprung weight, which is one reason I am kinda hesitant to put big brakes on it even though it definitly needs something in the brake department. I am definitly planing to atleast add a rear sway bar, and maybe upgrade the front too. I also what to kit a full poly front end kit.
I put the beefed up 87GT suspension in the front of my 84, along with the swaybar and springs cut 1 coil. For the rear I have the held coilovers, 88 cradle, stock 88 rear bar, and konis all around. I put poly where I could and I have the lebaron/S10 brakes up front, stock 88 rears.
The car is VERY nice handling wise. Much more solid and predictable than the 86
The car is VERY nice handling wise. Much more solid and predictable than the 86
- Series8217
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The Dark Side of Will wrote:The BEST thing you can do for your car's handling is go WIDE on the rear wheels and tires. This will improve both controlability and limts.
Listen to this man. He speaks the truth. Do not bother buying new rims and tires if you are not going to go xtra wide on the rear. We're talking 255 rear 205 front for starters.
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I had not really though about swaping to an 88 cradle. I know there are kits for that, but what are the advantages to it? Another problem for that would be finding the 88 cradle since I don't know of any junkyards around here with 88 fieros, and it would be hella exspinsive to ship. Oh, and how wide of tires will fit under a stock fiero without rubbing and sticking out to far?
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Where do u go to get the four corner weights??? Im not cheap enough for truck stops, just kidding aaron. :la:
Last edited by product1620 on Sat Aug 05, 2006 6:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Series8217
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The '88 cradle gets rid of the bad behaviours of the rear suspension and gets rid of the nervousness that the early rear feels, even when built.I_wear_pants wrote:I had not really though about swaping to an 88 cradle. I know there are kits for that, but what are the advantages to it? Another problem for that would be finding the 88 cradle since I don't know of any junkyards around here with 88 fieros, and it would be hella exspinsive to ship. Oh, and how wide of tires will fit under a stock fiero without rubbing and sticking out to far?
WCF claims that 17x9-45 wheels will fit with coil overs. They ran 255 tires, but you might be able to go wider. Artherd on the other forum ran 265's on 18x8.5's on his '88. Because the '88's have greater strut angles than the early cars, they can take slightly wider wheels.
I've found that 16x8-25 wheels fit under the stock bodywork. If you compare this to the front/backspacing of the 17x9-45, you find that you might be able to squeeze another 1/4-1/2" off wheel width under the stock bodywork, if you're careful.
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What width and offset wheel?Dough19 wrote:Do you think a 265/45/16 tire would fit on an 88 rear with coilovers?
I'm running 16x8-25 wheels with 255/50-16 tires. That's as much backspacing as the early suspension can run and the tires are out far enough to look beastly, but not out too far.
265's would fit, but I'm not sure I'd want to run them on 8" wheels.
You could probably fit 16x8.5-30 wheels on the rear of an '88, but don't take that as a guarantee.
- Series8217
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I was hoping they would be a little cheaper than that. Oh well.Chase Race wrote:http://www.pegasusautoracing.com/produc ... ?RecID=851