LoveMy05Civic
New Member
I just got 15in Konig Feather rims and i want to lower my civic about 1 inch, ive looked a the eibach pro kit, and H@R sport springs,anybody recommend a certain brand?
I have to agree. I think Eibach generally has a better reputation. Eibach will lower you about 1.5 inches though, but thats not much of a difference. I dont know what kind of condition the roads near you are.....if they are relatively smooth, you SHOULD be okay on stock shocks for a little while. But its not recommended. You are better off saving up for a decent coilover set, or getting a set of aftermarket shocks to go with the springs.
^^ I'm in a 6th gen, but I like my Eibach pros, running on stock shocks for nearly a year without any problems. I'm toe-corrected with a Blox camber kit and don't take corners particularly hard. Nice aggressive stance without the tastelessly overdone fender/wheel overlap look.
Not that I'm recommending you overlook purchasing a set of aftermarket shocks--in the long run this will probably look and feel a lot better--but I just wanted to point out my positive experience using springs with stock shocks.
They told you exactly right.Thanks for the input VSP.
LoveMy05Civic......you can get away with just lowering springs for a certain amount of time, but will be risking blowing your stock shocks. And you are also sacrificing performance and ride quality. Its a choice you have to take.
Just for reference purposes, I'm just shy of 200,000 miles on mine running stock shocks. Of those I (second owner) put 100,000 miles on, and roughly 25,000 of those miles are on Eibachs.They told you exactly right.
Also, if you do just run the springs w/ stock shocks, how many miles are on your car?
And are they the original shocks? If your mileage is high, and the stocks are original, you're going to want to save your money for good shocks as well.
OP, you should definitely consider heeding the advice of those with a similar-generation civic.2NRSTV said:My brother bought Eibach Pros for his 7th Gen a couple months after he bought the car brand new back in 2002. Ended up blowing the shocks in a month. Might now happen to you, but you might want to look into aftermarket shocks just in case..
would a 1.5 inch drop fill in some of that wheel gap without clearance problems?I have to agree. I think Eibach generally has a better reputation. Eibach will lower you about 1.5 inches though, but thats not much of a difference. I dont know what kind of condition the roads near you are.....if they are relatively smooth, you SHOULD be okay on stock shocks for a little while. But its not recommended. You are better off saving up for a decent coilover set, or getting a set of aftermarket shocks to go with the springs.
i have a little over 70k miles on mine mostly highway miles though.They told you exactly right.
Also, if you do just run the springs w/ stock shocks, how many miles are on your car?
And are they the original shocks? If your mileage is high, and the stocks are original, you're going to want to save your money for good shocks as well.
Right now i have 15in Konigs on a 195/60 tire.That depends highly on your wheel size.
Im going to be honest, I cant answer your question regardless. But anyone who CAN answer it will need to know other things such as the width and offset of your wheel.Right now i have 15in Konigs on a 195/60 tire.
i did this and anywhere from a 1-1.5 drop would leave me with plenty of room and no clearance issuesi would go outside with a measuring tape ans see what to expect from the drop.
How much of a drop did you get, any clearance issues?i love eibach. but i have sportline dont know much about the pro kit.