Stupid company and their stupid spring rate units. Kilograms? Thanks a lot assholes. How far per
x kilograms?!
If you want an extreme street setup that will be really rough on bad roads but kick ass on the canyons you should aim for 500 lbf/in (that's pounds-force per inch) in the front and around 350 lbf/in in the rear. Assuming the D2 coilover dampers can handle those rates. I'm guessing they can. Mike Kojima runs these rates on his street car.
If you want something to use on the canyons only you could probably go as high as 1,000 lbf/in in the front and 700 lbf/in in the rear for a rock solid ride. Who knows if the D2 coilovers are up to this. I'd ask them.
I see you'll have to order in "kg", so here's some conversions:
1,000 lbf/in = 14.594 N/mm
700 lbf/in = 10.216 N/mm
500 lbf/in = 7.297 N/mm
350 lbf/in = 5.108 N/mm
I'm assuming their "kg" crap is really Newtons per millimeter, but who knows?! Get the info from D2 directly so you can compare.
Edit: I just found that when you click the "view Applications" link they list the units as Kg/mm. Hang on...
Originally Posted by
JSutterTo convert lbf/in to kg/mm (Pounds-force per inch to Kilograms per millimetre)
lbf/in x 0.0791 = kg/mm
Source:
http://forums.maxima.org/4240073-post20.html
So...
1,000 lbf/in = 79.1 Kg/mm
700 lbf/in = 55.37 Kg/mm
500 lbf/in = 39.55 Kg/mm
350 lbf/in = 27.685 Kg/mm
That doesn't seem right at all. D2 only sells 3.5 - 21 Kg/mm springs... =/