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Old 07-05-2008, 12:42 PM   #1
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My reference is experience. The additional heat I am referring to, is not normal heat coming from brakes, hubs, etc. but heat from the tire rubbing on the side of the shock, if they do flex enough to actually rub.
McPherson strut cars already have more heat into the shocks than conventional suspension cars, as the shock bodies are actually a part of the hub/mounting assembly. Coventional shocks get heat only through a very small connection point and through the surrounding hot air in an enclosed wheel well.
Adding the friction of a tire rubbing against the shock on a regular basis (laps) is additional heat they do not need.
That was my concern and just something for the original postor to consider with his 2mm clearance.
I understood your question in a nice way and respond accordingly
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Old 07-05-2008, 03:27 PM   #2
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James,

There are many Boxster forum posts describing spacer use from 5-18MM. There may be one who said he had a problem with a wheel bearing. But, the bearings will fail anyway with mileage and there are several postings of this normal failure.

2MM clearance: I remember a description of a "credit card" thickness clearance by an established Boxster forum poster (on a different board).
We had a wheel rubbing on the damper; turned out to be a bent wheel and we ground it smooth to solve the rubbing. The wheel would only rub and very hard right hand turns on the track.
If you have a tire rubbing yhe tire would fail before the damper would have any problem with heat, IMHO of course.

James, when you get your project done put up a photo on the forum

Take care,
Ed

Quickurt,

Thank you for your explanation.
I respectfully agree, to disagree.
Ed
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Old 07-05-2008, 04:40 PM   #3
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sboxin

Quickurt,

Thank you for your explanation.
I respectfully agree, to disagree.
Ed
Ed,
I raced a VW GTI, Improved Touring A, SCCA car quite a few years ago, now. Goes with the older than dirt.....
Anyway we did a then legal coil-over update by modifying the struts by removing the spring land but leaving the boss of the land as a sleeve around the strut. We then used that for the mounting base of the threaded coil-over sleeve. A way around the no coil-over rules saying you could not cut the welds off from the original spring land...
We also had strut hub failure problems with those cars and one solution was to use earlier wheels that had less offset that would reduce the lever arm action on the hub. (very same thing as warnings now on using spacers on Boxsters)
We got a set of aftermarket wheels (bargain, I thought) that had to have spacers to clear the strut. We then started having handling problems that progressed through the race, as if the tires were heating up and going away.
It turned out that the tires were rubbing the front shocks during cornering and Dick at Carrera Shocks said the McPherson heat was already about all the shocks could handle. Admittedly, this was quite a few years ago and all technology has improved.
We went back to the original wheels and it stopped (but the strut failures returned).
We finally made several sets of 1/8" spacers to figure out the clearance we had to have and cured both problems.

By the way, that's one bad-ass looking 986!!

Kurt
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Last edited by Quickurt; 07-05-2008 at 04:44 PM.
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