5 Common Mistakes When Tuning Your Suspension
Tuning your suspension works best when you fix the basics first instead of chasing lap times right away. Most drivers run into the same five issues that waste time and money.
Not Measuring Ride Height Before Any Changes
Grab a tape measure and check all four corners on level ground with the car at its normal weight. Many people skip this step and then wonder why the car sits crooked after they install new springs.
One common result shows up on track days. The left rear sits half an inch lower than the right because the driver only measured the front. The car now pushes in left-hand corners and requires constant steering corrections.
Mismatching Spring Rates to Your Actual Weight Distribution
Street cars rarely carry equal weight front to rear. If you drop in a set of 500-pound springs all around without weighing the corners first, the rear will feel loose under braking.
- Heavy drivers or those who carry tools in the trunk often need stiffer rear springs.
- Light cars with big front brake kits benefit from a slight rear spring increase to restore balance.
Test one change at a time on the same stretch of road. You will feel the difference in one or two laps instead of guessing.
Adjusting Dampers Without Incremental Testing
Turning every clicker at once hides what each adjustment actually does. Start with the dampers at their middle setting after you install new springs. Drive the same section three times and note what feels different before you touch another knob.
Drivers who make big jumps often end up with a car that either bottoms out or feels like it floats over bumps. Small steps keep the setup traceable when conditions change.
Skipping Alignment After Height or Spring Changes
Lowering the car by even an inch alters camber and toe. Run a basic alignment check the same day you finish the suspension work. Many street cars gain negative camber naturally when lowered, but the toe can shift enough to eat tires in a few hundred miles.
| Change | Common Result | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Lower front springs | More negative camber | Adjust upper control arms or add camber plates |
| Stiffer rear springs | Possible toe-out under load | Re-align and check rear toe links |
Ignoring How Tire Pressure Interacts with the New Setup
New springs and dampers change how the tire contacts the road. Run the same pressures you used before the changes and you will likely see the outside edges wear faster. Drop two to three psi from the fronts after a suspension refresh and recheck after a hundred miles. The car often turns in sharper without the extra sidewall flex.



