
Solid Subframe Mounts...any Good?
#1
Posted 31 May 2010 - 09:42 PM
cheers!
#2
Posted 31 May 2010 - 09:48 PM
#3
Posted 31 May 2010 - 09:50 PM
No more worrying about broken mountings at MoT time either.
#4
Posted 31 May 2010 - 09:51 PM
#5
Posted 31 May 2010 - 09:52 PM
#6
Posted 31 May 2010 - 09:54 PM
1. Noise - solid mounts will feed back more road noise - the downside of stiffening things up
& 2. Stress - and this is anecdotal 2nd hand info - if you solid mount the entire front sub, towers, body mount and front teardrops its a little too solid and can lead to the front panel to wing join fracturing - so fit everything else but just renew the rubber teardrops (combine this with polybushing the lower arms and using the uprated tie bar bushes, minispares do a mixed material kit - and jobs a good un...
#7
Posted 31 May 2010 - 09:55 PM
#8
Posted 31 May 2010 - 09:56 PM
Yep - that's a well spent thirty quid or so - sharpens up the handling very nicely indeed - but - and there's always a but, in this case 2:
1. Noise - solid mounts will feed back more road noise - the downside of stiffening things up
& 2. Stress - and this is anecdotal 2nd hand info - if you solid mount the entire front sub, towers, body mount and front teardrops its a little too solid and can lead to the front panel to wing join fracturing - so fit everything else but just renew the rubber teardrops (combine this with polybushing the lower arms and using the uprated tie bar bushes, minispares do a mixed material kit - and jobs a good un...
cheers mate, would you be able to post a link to this mixed minispares kit?
#9
Posted 31 May 2010 - 09:57 PM
#10
Posted 31 May 2010 - 10:00 PM
#11
Posted 31 May 2010 - 10:01 PM
#12
Posted 31 May 2010 - 10:03 PM
you gonna use it on track or just for road? what engine you running?
its a 998 with stage 1 and yeah just road matey
#13
Posted 31 May 2010 - 10:31 PM
+1 to wile e coyote's reply
#14
Posted 01 June 2010 - 01:10 PM
The manufaturers changed when they perceived the market sector for the Mini changing more to 'little old ladies and mums' and tried to improve the NHV (that's noise, harshness and vibration). Unfortunately this spoiled the crisp handling for which the Mini was renowned and gave rise to a new failure mode, rubber mounting failure.
Solid mounting really doesn't make the car noticeably more harsh, but it does improve the entire 'driving feel'.
It's the first thing I do to any Mini I own which comes with rubber-mountings on the sub-frame. It also makes the car stronger in a rash ase. I've never heard of solid mountings causing body spliuts. After all, Minis whih are raed and rallied have solid mountings and have not suffered this way. The only body splits I've seen have been in the front bulkhead where the rubber mountings have failed at the very front and the extra load then carried by the rear rubber mountings (i.e. into the front bulkhead) have caused fatigue splits which have to be plated to repair.
#15
Posted 01 June 2010 - 01:10 PM
The manufaturers changed when they perceived the market sector for the Mini changing more to 'little old ladies and mums' and tried to improve the NHV (that's noise, harshness and vibration). Unfortunately this spoiled the crisp handling for which the Mini was renowned and gave rise to a new failure mode, rubber mounting failure.
Solid mounting really doesn't make the car noticeably more harsh, but it does improve the entire 'driving feel'.
It's the first thing I do to any Mini I own which comes with rubber-mountings on the sub-frame. It also makes the car stronger in a rash ase. I've never heard of solid mountings causing body spliuts. After all, Minis whih are raed and rallied have solid mountings and have not suffered this way. The only body splits I've seen have been in the front bulkhead where the rubber mountings have failed at the very front and the extra load then carried by the rear rubber mountings (i.e. into the front bulkhead) have caused fatigue splits which have to be plated to repair.
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