I did a suspension refresh on my series one last year. The biggest change came from having a full four-wheel alignment carried out afterwards. It is like driving a different car, it corners so sweetly now.
Excellent video. Wish this had been available when I did my S2 suspension last year. I still haven’t done the lower wishbone bushings as I couldn’t work out how to do it. But now I know ! Thanks
You discovered the punch method of aligning the wishbones! My reference is the S2 so the S1 looks to be different, but the flats on the control rod end that goes through the rear lower suspension joint fit into mating flats on the chassis to keep it from turning. Looks like the S1 may not have the flats? The reason the rear caliper is hard to get off is that there's a boss on the hub carrier for the top bolt that proturdes into the caliper slightly. You have to open the caliper a bit to get it off. You got it, but the trick is to keep the boss and caliper from pinching the little dust shield when putting it back together. They're easy to damage.
A 1997 with cast iron rear uprights. I'd suggest they aren't original but knowing Lotus, anything is possible. MMC? Alloy boot lid? Boot bag? I've got chassis 1649, another '97.
I did a suspension refresh on my series one last year.
The biggest change came from having a full four-wheel alignment carried out afterwards.
It is like driving a different car, it corners so sweetly now.
Which bushes did you use? I used the standard ones but I wish I’d use poly ones. I was put off by reports of an increase in NVH
+@blacker1000000 can’t wait to drive it! Did you do the alignment yourself? If so, give me all the info and tips so I can make a video! 🍻
Regarding the bushes, I stuck with standard as I used poly bushes on another car and found them a bit harsh.
Excellent video. Wish this had been available when I did my S2 suspension last year. I still haven’t done the lower wishbone bushings as I couldn’t work out how to do it. But now I know ! Thanks
+@JohnnyL20 thank you! Hope you’re a subscriber now 😉🍻
@@HelpMeDIYI have been a subscriber for a while. Thanks
@@JohnnyL20 🙏💪
You discovered the punch method of aligning the wishbones! My reference is the S2 so the S1 looks to be different, but the flats on the control rod end that goes through the rear lower suspension joint fit into mating flats on the chassis to keep it from turning. Looks like the S1 may not have the flats? The reason the rear caliper is hard to get off is that there's a boss on the hub carrier for the top bolt that proturdes into the caliper slightly. You have to open the caliper a bit to get it off. You got it, but the trick is to keep the boss and caliper from pinching the little dust shield when putting it back together. They're easy to damage.
+@justaddafan thanks for the info!🍻
Where do you find such detailed instruction? Good job btw🎉
+@efektmurowany thanks! That PDF is easily found with a Google search 😉
Personally, if the car is a keeper I always upgrade the toe links for stronger items. The OEM ones are weak.
+@TheMrrigma which ones do you use?
A 1997 with cast iron rear uprights. I'd suggest they aren't original but knowing Lotus, anything is possible. MMC? Alloy boot lid? Boot bag? I've got chassis 1649, another '97.
+@ax13h it has a boot bad abs I’m pretty sure the boot lid is fiberglass
You can do all of this without taking out the ball joints with the elise parts tool .
+@johnnystoka6625 but I was replacing the ball joints… I don’t understand what you are trying to say