Saturday, June 1, 2019

The "Hechtspeed Hatch" suspension and wheel install

Another big update on the Hechtspeed Hatchback! The last post I talked through the process of selecting the first round of mods for the '99 Civic DX Hatchback. This post is to walk through the install process and initial suspension setup.

Let's see...the first thing I did after enjoying a Junior High awards ceremony and then a 6th Grade graduation ceremony and then lunch at In-N-Out with the middle 2 boys was to take the 949Racing 6UL wheels and Hankook Ventus V2 205/50/15 tires to Burt Brothers Tires in Farmington. They're kind of the only game in town. The tire dude was diggin' the wheels. He knew what they were. He said he started out with Hondas (I assume he meant Civics and Integras) and now has an S2000, which I peeked in the parking lot. Anyway, I got the tires mounted on the wheels and balanced.
949 Racing 6UL wheels (15x7 +36mm) freshly mounted with Hankook Ventus V2 205/50/15 tires.
I rolled them into the garage and leaned them up against stuff so they wouldn't roll away. The bummer was later that afternoon I realized that all the balancing weights had fallen off the wheels.
Ha Ha wheel weights with "not-so-sticky" adhesive

























Like, really Burt Bros. I ran them over that afternoon and they re-balanced and added weights again. I wasn't done yet. That night I was mounting up the wheels and found one more wheel with weights sitting on the garage floor. hhhhhhh I put the wheel on anyway and ended up driving it like that to work. I could feel the vibration so I took the car in the next morning before work and had them balance and add weights. Kind of a hassle. I'll be honest, its really nice having a tire shop so close to home, but they've kind of messed up a lot of stuff for me through the years. But, they've been good in making the errors up for me. They have pretty good customer service.

The original visit was quick, like 30 minutes. I got home and got the car jacked up for the first time. The rear was pretty easy. I put my nice Costco jack under the rear subframe. I love my new jack! The 90's Civic's have nice metal tabs at the 4 corners to jack up the car. So, I threw jackstands under the rear tabs. I removed the rear stock wheels/tires.
Step 1, get car up on jackstands and remove stockies
I borrowed a torque wrench from the "Car Nuts" crew. Thanks Shawn!!! You can see it in the picture.
 Quick picture for the driver side front with the stock spring and shock assembly and front upper control arm removed.
I took a picture of the passenger side to see how the factory did the cotter pin on the ball-joint castle nut.
 Here's my attempt at getting the Skunk2 Pro Series Plus UCA (Upper Control Arm) to the same length as the stock UCA. It was about 6.5" from center of the mounting to the end of the ball-joint. Later I ended up changing this just a little to give it more camber. I read that the rear suspension gains more negative camber than the fronts when a car is lowered. So, due to that, I wanted to start off with stock length UCAs. I wasn't planning to go crazy low on ride height and I wanted to gain some negative camber, so that was my plan.
 Here's me measuring the difference in length of the Buddy Club Sport Spec coilover as compared to the stock assembly. It's about 3" shorter. I wasn't sure if this was going to translate into a 3" lowering of the ride height. It ended up lowering it about 2" or so.
Here is the driver side all installed. 
Here's the driver side with the new wheel/tire mounted up. Love the red and white combo!!!
Another shot, this time the passenger side. I made sure to clean the crap out of the wheel well area with brake cleaner and simple clean and a wet rag. 
 I tried finding info on how to remove the rear trunk trim and panels. I couldn't find any. So, I started unbolting stuff. haha I figured it out. I need to make an access door to be able to get to the top of the shock to make damper adjustments. This is much too big a hassle to make adjustments. I have the dampers set to 12 of 20 on the stiffness scale. 20 being the full stiff setting.
Here's the passenger rear installed. I also tried to clean up the whole area, wiping down the trailing arm, lower control arm and stuff. 
For the rear Skunk2 UCAs I measured them and went a little longer than stock knowing that it was going to gain negative camber as I lowered it. The rears ended up being lowered almost exactly 2". I can't remember how much longer, maybe 1/2"? 
Just a quick picture of the garage scene with the tools and parts laying around. Love the little magnet LED flashlights. I have 2 light bulbs for garage lighting, so I rely on an a shop light and these little LED flashlights.
Here is the Hechtspeed Hatchie down on all 4's after the install. 
Here it is a block away at the Church parking lot. The initial setup was too low. It rubbed like crazy up front just driving slowly down my street. So, it needed to be raised up.
I had baseball games to go to so I ended up working on it in the afternoon. It only took me 2 hours to get it back up on jackstands and adjust the front ride height +0.75". The initial camber was very little. So, when raising it up I added 1/8" of more negative camber as measured by how much I moved the UCA in.
Not sure if you can see the black permanent marker marks I made to show where I started from the original setting. I didn't measure but guess this was about 1/8". I loosened the 4 allen bolts enough to tape the ball-joint over the same amount on both sides. 

Last 2 shots for tonight. Raising the car up .75" up front and setting the shocks to 15 of 20 solved all rubbing up front. No fender rolling or trimming of plastic required. Would it look cooler lower with more camber. Yes. But, I'm looking for some practicality and being able to drive the car hard in corners and have 0 rubbing. 
This install all told took me about 12 hours. I did it 100% solo with all hand tools. It was pretty fun. No cussing occurred. Nothing broke. I struggled with the very last rear UCA bolts for about 20 minutes, making sure I did not strip them in the chassis threads. Overall, it was a total success and very satisfying to do myself. 

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