NickNorie wrote:JamesDowning wrote:We have true coil overs in our stock suspension.
No No No... We have struts with coil springs on them. We dont have a TRUE coilover. To me a coil over has adjustable springrates with a threaded body so you can loosen or tighten the jam nut compressing or loosening the spring.
Here is a strut. Notice ZERO adjust-ability
A single spring rate coil over. notice the threaded body with two jam nuts to be adjustable.
And a dual rate coil over.
In slang, you are correct... In reality, a strut is usually a coil-over...
In actuallity, one of the "coil overs" you posted is actually a strut, itself... Anything where the damper controls any of the caster/camber/toe of the suspension is a strut, even if it doesn't have a spring on it. The rear of my LeSabre, for instance, has seperate coil springs, but since the "shock" supports and directs the upper part of the rear "knuckle" (for lack of a better term), it's a strut...
A true "coil-over shock" is a spring and a damper that don't control caster/camber/toe... sort of like what we've got, with having upper and lower control arms that control all of that, and the coil-over shock that just controls ride height, spring, and damping...
A true "coil-over strut" is like what Hondas and most FWD cars have, that have a "MacPherson strut" style suspension system, where there is no upper control arm, but the strut takes the place of the upper control arm, and has a spring over it...
Any coil-over that has a threaded body and valving adjustments is called a "fully adjustable coil-over"...
Mike