Lotus-e-Clan wrote:I haven't looked into the Excel rear geometry suspension in any detail, but the original Elite rear depended on many of the bushes (struts, dampers, swing arms) distorting to take up the "imperfect" geometry. It wouldn't surprise me if the Excel's rear still had some dependency on bush distortion to account for its own imperfections despite the revision.
I tried coil-overs on the Clan once and whipped them off after just one road trip ..the front suspension geometry meant that there is a lot of twist in all sorts of planes that was normally SHARED by std body-mounted rubber spring seat and damper top bushes ...the coil-overs depended on their tiny top mounts doing the same job and it was moving all over the place ...and handled worse than the std set-up.
If the Excel coil-over top (or bottom) mounts are subjected to similar distortions then could it account for breakages?
Excel rear suspension geometry is pretty straightforward - upper as well as lower links so much less potential for distortion than on the Elite, and a shorter travel suspension. I suspect poor metal quality as you don't hear of broken springs on standard Excels. Also as the coilover spring is narrower than standard, the spring wire will be under greater stress. Finally, the standard springs have rubber mounts but the coilovers don't, so this will affect the rate of dissipation of the shock travelling through the spring.
ATB Richard