Jump07 wrote:
I am thinking about cutting holes in the body to put in new 29mm torsion bars...and then just slapping a sticker over the holes afterwards. I hear this saves hours of work/headache. What is the procedure for replacing the bars and lowering the rear suspension with these holes cut?
I did this and it saved me quite a bit of trouble. You actually don't even need to drill the holes in the side of the 944 unless you want to pull the bars all the way out. I have tabs welded onto the end of my bars and re-indexing them only requires pulling them a couple of inches, so there's already plenty of room for that on a 944. Once you get it right, you should never have to mess with it again unless you want to change bars or bushings, but it will take a little trial & error to decide what ride height you want in the first place, so this makes that work much easier and faster.
Ride height changes only take a few minutes once you get the hang of things... Smaller adjustments are easy enough with the eccentric bolts, so this is assuming that you want to make a bigger change by adjusting the torsion bars... You just put a floor jack under the suspension, unload the torsion bars, grab the tabs with pliers, and wiggle until the bar slides out. Then simply raise or lower the jack to change the ride height (remember it has the opposite affect... raise the jack = lower the car), slide the bar back in, and you're done once the teeth are fully engaged. To get both sides even, I just set the eccentric adjusters in the middle on both sides, then measure and even-up the spring plate angle on both sides.
As for worries about drilling or welding onto the torsion bars, keep in mind that the modification is only done to the very end of the bars... If it does affect anything, it only affects the end of the spline section, which doesn't really matter, because the portion that acts as the spring is still a few inches further down. Even with a welder, not a lot of heat is going to make it a few inches to the spring portion when you have a big 30mm diameter piece of solid cold steel (ie a giant heat-sink), and you only need to make two quick 1" welds.