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There's a fella on cliotrophy, used to be a suspension engineer in motorsport. He's been chatting with AST, about a set up for his dc5. Thinks there springs are about 30% too stiff on all there kits.
Was very tricky getting the power down, I could see what you meant about going a lil softer...
They are good seats (I've had 2 sets), but they have a major fault. They barely lower you at all, 10mm. The biggest fault as standard is the driving position, which they don't really address. There are better seats, cheaper out there. No-where near supportive enough for track worth either.
I've been told that having incorrect (too low) speed rating on your tyres, or below the legal tread limit, voids some insurance policies. Not sure if that would apply here, but bear it in mind.
Shouldn't be done. Different grip levels across an axle is a bad idea. Better off having different front to back, as long as they are the same across each axle.
Very expensive for no proven gain. I'd be more inclined to remove the acoustic valve, get an rs Tuner, spend £200 on a track day. You will gain more power with a custom remap than a maxogen/viper etc
Go and drive one. Bear in mind that most reviewers had it top of its class until the Meg R26 arrived. The chassis is very sharp, similar to a BMW in that the harder you push it, the better it gets. IIRC Weeman runs one, might be worth asking his opinion. And the interior is a great place to be...
Most people that say the golf is boring haven't driven one. I actually prefer it to the 197. Quicker, better built, better steering, very good chassis. And better mpg.
Given that you could spend a day driving an R8, Gallardo, F430, Bentley GT, and a DBS for £1000, there's no way in hell I'd spend more than £500 on a clio at a track day.