We precision cnc machine the adjusting rod from high strength 6061 t6 aluminum and then treat them in mil a 8625 type iii hard anodize.
S13 rear traction rod length.
Traction arms by spl parts titanium rear rods s13 s14 z32 spl rtr s13 spl titanium rear traction rods eliminate the mushy rubber bushings on the stock links to reduce toe change in the rear suspension under hard acceleration braking and when going over bumps this.
As with the front this helps determine the camber curve of the rear suspension.
Determine caster or thrust angle on the rear suspension.
Also with the really low ride height you have you should really have longer traction rods leaving traction rods at stock length will give you some bump steer and the suspension kinda binds up.
On an aggressively lowered car these should be lengthened to about 8 5in for a less aggressive toe curve and less.
The problem with leaving the tension rod set at factory length on a drift car is that drift cars tend to run zero camber.
Rear red traction rod for nissan 240sx 1989 1994 s13 1995 1998 s14 adjustable.
Megan racing rear traction rods for nissan 240sx s13 s14 89 98.
Rear traction rods allow adjustment of the rear multi link suspension.
This leaves you with a huge disparity between the ruca and tension rod arcs which gives you a very wacky toe curve.
7 8 to 5 8 from stock length.
Isr formerly isis performance pro series rear traction rods nissan s13 s14 150 00.
Rods that go on the very back.
The lengths on these arms are fully adjustable and with the right.
Isr formerly isis performance pro series front tension control rods nissan 240sx 89 94 s13 185 00 169 99.
Voodoo13 adjustable rear traction arms for nissan 240sx 89 94 s13 voodoo13 rear traction rods are designed engineered and tested on race tracks across the globe using feedback of top tier drivers and technical directors.
In order to get zero camber people typically lengthen the ruca rear upper control arm.
They can be adjusted to eliminate bump steer and alter other rear suspension traction settings to improve suspension response.
Thread in technical questions started by dex jun.