adjustable or non adjustable panard bar?
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adjustable or non adjustable panard bar?
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Depends on what your future goals for your car are.
I have a non adjustable because right now all I needed was an upgrade over my stock one when I snapped it in half.
If you want to get serious with drag/handling capabilities, then an adjustable one would probably be better. Just make sure that you have it done at an alignment shop to get it done right if you don't know how to do it yourself.black 95 t/a, a4, beefed up tranny w/ higher stall converter, transgo shift kit, trans temp gauge, trans cooler, richmond 3.73's, loudmouth, hypertech programmer, 160 thermo, descreened maf, TB bypass and airfoil, trick flow intake elbow, underdrive pulleys, moroso cai, edelbrock panhard rod, bmr stb, slp sfc's, fiberglass firehawk hood, hawk pads, taylor wires, ngk plugs, royal purple fluids,...and hopefully more to come
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Originally posted by Joe 1320Adjustable is great for re-centering the rear of the car. It is especially necessary if the car is lowered.
I still have stock ride height for now, so the non-adjustable works fine for me. Eventually when I lower my car, I will then switch to an adjustable.
Redbird94~I still have no idea what I run in the 1/4. I was supposed to go to the track about a week ago with 2 of my buddies, but one of my friends couldn't make it due to some last minute family stuff.
We are planning on going the end of this month thoughblack 95 t/a, a4, beefed up tranny w/ higher stall converter, transgo shift kit, trans temp gauge, trans cooler, richmond 3.73's, loudmouth, hypertech programmer, 160 thermo, descreened maf, TB bypass and airfoil, trick flow intake elbow, underdrive pulleys, moroso cai, edelbrock panhard rod, bmr stb, slp sfc's, fiberglass firehawk hood, hawk pads, taylor wires, ngk plugs, royal purple fluids,...and hopefully more to come
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Considering the price difference is very small, I'd go with adjustable. I have one on my car, and it is wonderful. Regardless of whether your car is lowered, your rear is probably not perfectly center at rest due to manufacturing differences in every vehicle, not to mention how much stuff you carry in your car changes how centered the rearend is. I also have 17X11's, and as all of us know that have those wheels, the factory bar does not center the rear perfectly in most circumstances. That's why the adjustable PHR is pretty much mandatory with 11's in the rear."No, officer, that bottle is my onboard Halon system"
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Originally posted by redbird94how hard is it to adjust it?black 95 t/a, a4, beefed up tranny w/ higher stall converter, transgo shift kit, trans temp gauge, trans cooler, richmond 3.73's, loudmouth, hypertech programmer, 160 thermo, descreened maf, TB bypass and airfoil, trick flow intake elbow, underdrive pulleys, moroso cai, edelbrock panhard rod, bmr stb, slp sfc's, fiberglass firehawk hood, hawk pads, taylor wires, ngk plugs, royal purple fluids,...and hopefully more to come
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It depends on which one you get. I have the Spohn one, and you adjust it in the middle. I backed the car up on ramps with a half tank of gas (typically my car is between 3/4 tank and 1/4 tank, I only fill it up on road trips). I measured from the inner edge of the rim to the wheelwell on both sides, and adjusted until it was dead center. No problems at all. I've since tweaked it a few times due to lack of thread lock on the lock nuts, but I'd venture to guess it's within 1/8-1/4 inch of being right. And since this ain't NASCAR, 1/4 inch ain't gonna hurt anything"No, officer, that bottle is my onboard Halon system"
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Originally posted by redbird94how hard is it to adjust it?
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