I can only guess that in the weeks since the car was returned to the road earlier this summer, its more regular use has helped clean off a glazing on the Ferodo DS2500 pads or the Brembo High Carbon discs. Or perhaps a kind stranger worked on my car in secret. Either way, my ‘to fix’ list has decreased to just one item.
Video: Driving the 456bhp Renault Zoe e-sport flat-out on track
The set of Bilstein B14 coilovers I’m saving for will set me back more than, breathe deeply, £500, so it’s taking quite a while to prepare for this hefty financial burden (I’m on a journalist’s salary, after all). But in order to keep that modification ball rolling in the meantime, I’ve removed the back seats from the car.
I didn’t go through the trouble of weighing the seats, but I’d confidentially estimate that the whole bench arrangement adds less than 30kg to the car’s mass, meaning the effects of its removal will be negligible. But no bottom has perched on the rear bench since 2014 so there’s little point in them being there. And 30kg is 30kg.
Anyway, the seat removal has brought some other indirect improvements, such as improved space for a harness, the fitting of which will be my next port of call. After some interweb investigating I’ve found that bolting a harness to the Isofix bar holes in the car’s floor, rather than the rear passenger seatbelt holes ahead of them, will extend the belts further back. This, I’m told, will ensure they’re stretched out far enough to not break my spine in an accident – which is a genuine risk for badly placed belts and possibly worse than the prospect of an inverted face caused by headbutting the steering wheel in an accident.
Additionally, the barer interior has influenced the exhaust’s perceivable tone. Now that its sound waves are not vibrating through part leather furniture, rather straight through the floor and into my ears, it sounds a tad louder and much raspier. This makes the whole experience of driving quickly that more engaging.
As you’ll see with this latest update, progress for the 182 project remains fairly slow, but with each step the Clio is edging towards its ultimate form of a track-inspired fast road hot hatch. Most importantly, with every adjustment, it gets that much better to drive.
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48 quid a kick?
Sam mate, if you care so much your kidneys, what about not remove them? But I wonder how much it costs you a pint, 5p?
You want parts to cost you what on average, 1p?
For what its worth...
I have Bilstein B14s on my GT86. I dont find them too firm. I suppose the contrast with the standard car is pretty much how you describe your Clio now. Its nuggety and a bit uncompromising at town speeds, but on a fast B road it flows. It isnt uncomfortable. My stock Abarth 500 was worse.
Basically I can drive it now with less concern for broken road surfaces, where the standard set up felt nervous. Big improvement. And most people rate the stock GT86 set up so thats pretty good.
Anyway - food for thought...
Interesting
Very interesting. I ran the Subaru BRZ long-termer on the Autocar fleet so understand what you mean. B14s are still appealing, but I may wait until something needs replacing before I consider a switch for now. Journalism doesn't leave me with many pennies at the end of each month sadly
Spring rates
I agree with your approach to spring rates. It has been recognised for decades that spring frequencies of about 1.5 Hz are perfect for a road going but sporty car and I believe this is just as applicable now as it was in the '60s. Unfortunately everyone seems to think stiff (up to and beyond 2Hz) springs make cars handle best so most coilovers seem to cater for this demand. I would always steer clear of coilovers for that reason.
Just don't get tempted to the Dark Side after your track day on that lovely smooth tarmac, that is so unrepresentative of real roads....
Truth
I used to run semi-slick tyres on track, which made the 182 lean like a 2CV. Thankfully, with road tyres it corners far more flat. But you are right, trackdays do make coilovers sound tempting. I shall try and resist..