Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
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Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
I am very interested in getting myself a new front and rear uprated roll bar.
My car has been lowered 30mm courtesy of the koni kit I've got installed, bearing this in mind, will I need shorter drop links or will the roll bars fit perfectly regardless of the drop?
Cheers
My car has been lowered 30mm courtesy of the koni kit I've got installed, bearing this in mind, will I need shorter drop links or will the roll bars fit perfectly regardless of the drop?
Cheers
Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
They'll fit fine. Only effect that lowering the car will have is that the ARB may not be totally flat when static which some people seem to think is important. Personally I don't think it makes any odds at the kind of small angles we're talking about here.
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
Go for it they are a fantastic mod, I willdig out some before and after cornering pics from mytrack car! The difference is amazing!
Be warned though the droplinks you get with the front will foul the inner arch if you fit them, best sticking with standard!
Be warned though the droplinks you get with the front will foul the inner arch if you fit them, best sticking with standard!
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
oh you actually get drop links with the front one?
Ive found that fensport are cheaper than on the whiteline website, or is there somewhere else that supplies them?
Ive found that fensport are cheaper than on the whiteline website, or is there somewhere else that supplies them?
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
Camskill were by far the cheapest when I got them plus they did free delivery!
Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
SuperRedMR2 wrote:oh you actually get drop links with the front one?
You do but they're useless. They're just a length of metal bar bent into a loop around a rubber bush at each end. Unfortunately this makes them too big to fit inside the bracket on the shock casing so your only option is to fit them outside the bracket where they'll foul the inner arch when the suspension compresses.
In summary don't bother with them.
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
kaiowas wrote:SuperRedMR2 wrote:oh you actually get drop links with the front one?
You do but they're useless. They're just a length of metal bar bent into a loop around a rubber bush at each end. Unfortunately this makes them too big to fit inside the bracket on the shock casing so your only option is to fit them outside the bracket where they'll foul the inner arch when the suspension compresses.
In summary don't bother with them.
I got them to work quite well, although I did adjust the arch with a hammer. But even so Tom riding curbs at cadwell managed to punch it through the arch
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
LOL
I thought mine were ok on road untill a day at anglesey , mine have now had some fine adjustemnt with a hammer!
I thought mine were ok on road untill a day at anglesey , mine have now had some fine adjustemnt with a hammer!
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
So really I just use my existing ones lol as long as the dont break when I remove them!
Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
Just get a set of 4 links off ebay.
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
Ill just be very careful when taking them off as i replaced them all with new ones from Toyota, i'd rather not buy cheaper alternatives from eBay when it comes to things like that.
Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
With my experience now I would say you are right. Took my car to tyres northampton yesterday and the front links rubber split after only about 8 months. They were only a tenner each. How much did you pay toyota for yours? They quoted me £70 each.
I am now considering the twosrus ones at £72.95 the pair.
Incidentally, they said the cause may be the stress they are under due to the angle they are at cos the car is lowered, but it isn't. They said I might need longer or shorter ones, but this thread suggests it doesn't make any difference.
Oh, and I got my front ARB from camskill, and the links with it I couldn't fit because if you put the loop end on the strut then the other end which is just straight threaded bar, just points down at the floor. Looks like it needs a right angle in it to go through the bar, but as they didn't have the ball joint I just assumed it wouldn't work so left them off and got the ebay ones. So I would be interested to know how people got them fitted or if I got the wrong links in my kit. There were no instructions showing how the WLR links should be fitted.
I am now considering the twosrus ones at £72.95 the pair.
Incidentally, they said the cause may be the stress they are under due to the angle they are at cos the car is lowered, but it isn't. They said I might need longer or shorter ones, but this thread suggests it doesn't make any difference.
Oh, and I got my front ARB from camskill, and the links with it I couldn't fit because if you put the loop end on the strut then the other end which is just straight threaded bar, just points down at the floor. Looks like it needs a right angle in it to go through the bar, but as they didn't have the ball joint I just assumed it wouldn't work so left them off and got the ebay ones. So I would be interested to know how people got them fitted or if I got the wrong links in my kit. There were no instructions showing how the WLR links should be fitted.
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
I paid £44 each two years ago from Mr T. I cant remember how much the fronts were, probably around £70 each.
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
Just a techy point to note, if you lower the car you want longer links, not shorter ones to keep the angle of the ARB the same as it was before the lowering.
The angle can be important, i have seen an ARB totally invert itself when the links were too short and the car went over a kerb.
The angle can be important, i have seen an ARB totally invert itself when the links were too short and the car went over a kerb.
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
does the mk2 turbo front arb fit the mk1 without any modifications?
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
Never tried to be honest, the Mk1 front ARB is pretty thick to start with.
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
sorry i meant the rear anti roll bar
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
It will fit straight onto a Mk1b with no mods, a Mk1a will need its mounting position moving rearward by 2".
Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
On the subject of MK1a rear anti-roll bars Paul, what options do I have for beefing up my MK1a rear anti-roll bar with out the expense of a Whiteline one? ie is there anything out there that will fit without any, or very little, modification?
I've had a full koni + spring kit installed, 25mm drop approx, and I'm not happy with the rear of my car. The front feels great but the rear rolls excessively under cornering to the point where I'm getting body roll oversteer coming from the rear. Also, at motorway speeds, if I change direction quickly in a lane change or just weave the car quickly left and right, the rear of the car feels like it's on a water bed. Rocking one way and then the next and taking a few more rocks to settle out - very disconcerting and feels unstable and high speed slip road blats. It feels like the rear is under sprung, ie too soft, but I'm wondering if I should beef up my rear anti roll bar instead?
I've had a full koni + spring kit installed, 25mm drop approx, and I'm not happy with the rear of my car. The front feels great but the rear rolls excessively under cornering to the point where I'm getting body roll oversteer coming from the rear. Also, at motorway speeds, if I change direction quickly in a lane change or just weave the car quickly left and right, the rear of the car feels like it's on a water bed. Rocking one way and then the next and taking a few more rocks to settle out - very disconcerting and feels unstable and high speed slip road blats. It feels like the rear is under sprung, ie too soft, but I'm wondering if I should beef up my rear anti roll bar instead?
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Re: Whiteline Anti Roll Bars
Beefing the rear ARB is one of the best mods you can do we have found.
A mk2 Turbo ARB will fit on the rear of a Mk1 if you do the following.
1. Use the current rearmost mounting hole as the new front bracket mounting hole.
2. Drill a new rear hole in the correct position (this effectively moves the ARB into the Mk1b position.
3. Cut open a small access flap in the top of the chassis leg inside the boot directly over the new hole.
4. Weld a nut captive inside the chassis.
5. Weld and seam seal the access flap back over.
Don't feel bad about cutting into the top of the chassis rail, Toyota already have two such access panels already in the boot, but they are covered in soundproofing type tar, these are there for exactly the same purpose.
EDIT: you need to use Mk1 FRONT ARB brackets on the rear with this mod and 19mm bushes.
A mk2 Turbo ARB will fit on the rear of a Mk1 if you do the following.
1. Use the current rearmost mounting hole as the new front bracket mounting hole.
2. Drill a new rear hole in the correct position (this effectively moves the ARB into the Mk1b position.
3. Cut open a small access flap in the top of the chassis leg inside the boot directly over the new hole.
4. Weld a nut captive inside the chassis.
5. Weld and seam seal the access flap back over.
Don't feel bad about cutting into the top of the chassis rail, Toyota already have two such access panels already in the boot, but they are covered in soundproofing type tar, these are there for exactly the same purpose.
EDIT: you need to use Mk1 FRONT ARB brackets on the rear with this mod and 19mm bushes.