do c/c plates affect ride quality?

lopony

Founding Member
Nov 9, 2002
76
0
6
moulton,alabama
i am wondering because i have the c-springs on my car and was going to get them and install them if it would make a difference in the ride.my alignment is perfect i was just thinking that the cc plates would allow you to raise the strut back up to stock length .....i am also thinking of putting some monroe shocks i bought for a 93 GT i had on my 2000 GT since i have heard that you should put fox body shocks on a 99-2003 GT if it has been lowered....i dont know so help me out........please!!!
thanks guys.
 
It will affect your ride quality just a little, but it is mostly just added noise. The stock Camber plates have a huge rubber bushing your strut mounts to, this eliminates a ton of road noise, but it also gives when cornering hard which causes you to loose your alignment in hard corners. The aftermarket c/c plates have metal spherical bushings, these are very noisy, but give you excellent alignment and hold it tight even in hard corners. The downfall is when you hit a bump instead of the rubber deflecting, you have a metal ball inside a pocket swiveling, which makes a clunking sound sometimes and you can hear all of the road noise from your tires and suspension because the rubber isolates it from the factory, but the aftermarket ones bolt directly to the chassis with no rubber bushings, so you feel and hear everything. It is normal though. If you start hearing some strange sounds after installing them don't worry. All that noise is there from the start, you can just hear it now.

Carl
 
caster/camber plates are a great thing to install on any mustang weither its stock height or not.. as was said in an earlier post.. the rubber bushing isolates.. when going hard into a corner, meaning you lose your alignment in the corner.. the griggs cc plates i run on the notch are louder then stock.. but so is the whole suspension.. as for the fox struts and shocks on a newer stang you are correct.. on a lowered newer stang.. fox struts and shocks are the way to go.
 
The rivets can be drilled out, but it doesn't offer much adjustment. The place I got my car aligned drilled the rivets out and realigned the car but it still isn't right so I bought a set of Pro3i plates. If you're only lowered 1.25" or something it might work, if you are lower though you will probably need aftermarket plates.
 
nickthegenius said:
The rivets can be drilled out, but it doesn't offer much adjustment. The place I got my car aligned drilled the rivets out and realigned the car but it still isn't right so I bought a set of Pro3i plates. If you're only lowered 1.25" or something it might work, if you are lower though you will probably need aftermarket plates.

thanks,
I have the Eibach prokit springs. I can swear that my buddy still has stock cc plates and got his adjusted.

Anybody else know if you can adjust stock cc plates?