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I bought a used set of Alden Eagle adjustable billet shocks a few years ago. They were presented to me as "Hall Pantera" shocks. They have black springs in the rear and orange springs in the front.

They fit well and I have them adjusted low. I have 17" rims with low profile Goodyear F1s. My problem is that they give a very harsh ride. I liken it to the suspension compliance of a wet 2x4. I know the spring rates and the low profile sidewalls are a lot of the problem, but I have been told that these shocks are for "street rodders" not sports cars and are notorious for a rough ride. I have been told that Koni adjustables are much more compliant and an all around better choice.

So...any idea how to identify the springs so I can try another set from Alden? Am I never going to be satisfied with the Aldens and should I try Koni Adjustables? If I want the Konis, what part # and what springs should I be looking for? Is there any alternative brand that gives a decent ride, but is still up to spirited canyon carving in the Rockies?

Any advice and shared experience with shocks in general will be appreciated.

Thanks, Mooso.
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Mooso,

Hall's Alden kit used 4" diameter springs, where modern replacement shocks would be 2.5" diameter. Hall supplied them with a 680lb rear and something like a 450lb front, which IMO is too much spring for a street car, as it soudn you are finding out. The other downside is that the Aldens are quite notorious for leaking.

Koni's are good shocks but expensive, IMO Dennis Quella is the best one to talk to for Koni's.

I am using QA1's on both Pantera's (400lb front and 500lb rear on wide body Pantera's) and a GT40, personally I don't think they can be beat for the money. Available from some Panetra vendors (Larry Stock Pantera Parts Connection sells them) or via Summit Racing in both single & double adjustable versions. The benefit of getting them from a vendor is the spacers that are required for mounting, although I have a dimensioned drawing if you want to get your own machined. Various springs are readily available for around $30 each from Summit so switching is not a big deal.

If you want to retain the Aldens you could search out 4" springs in lower rates, or possibly even move the front spring to the rear and source just two new springs up front. Alternatively Alden should be able to supply spring perches to convert to a more readily available 2.5" diameter spring.

Julian
Shock absorbers have more of an effect on ride quality than springs do. High quality shock absorbers do an excellent job of damping the suspension and controlling high spring rates.

I have aluminum bodied Koni gas shocks (from Pantera East) and can attest to the fact that the ride is very comfortable with them. When I put 18" wheels on the rear of my Pantera, I developed a minor rubbing problem under full suspension compression. In an effort to reduce suspension travel under compression, I removed the 475 lb springs I had been using and installed 700 lb springs. Much to my surprise, I could barely tell the difference, from a ride quality perspective. As per Dennis Quella's advice, I also installed an extra set of bump rubbers in the shocks, which is what I believe resolved my rubbing issue.

My Pantera, with Konis and 475 lb (front)/700 lb (rear) springs, has a more comfortable ride than my bone stock, daily driver, Porsche 997S!

That being said, if I were doing it all over, I'd either follow Julian's advice and try double adjustable QA1's or I'd go with Ridetech double adjustables.
Last edited by davidnunn
quote:
Originally posted by mooso:

... Am I never going to be satisfied with the Aldens ...



probably not

quote:
Originally posted by mooso:

... Is there any alternative brand that gives a decent ride, but is still up to spirited canyon carving in the Rockies ...



How about the Ride Tech shocks sold by Scott at SACC Restorations?
OK, great info so far. A few more questions...

Does anyone that has bought the Ride Tech shocks have an opinion about their ride quality and durability. This looks like the safest choice because the parts selections have been made for a Pantera.

On the QA1s, what model name/# and what shock height am I looking for? There are lots of choices with QA1s and I'd like to narrow the search down to what works.

On the Konis, the only price I could find for the 3012s, complete, was $3500. While I'm sure Quella has a better price, I'm not going to bother him because this is just too high a price point for me.

Thanks, Mooso.
quote:
Originally posted by mooso:
OK, great info so far. A few more questions...

Does anyone that has bought the Ride Tech shocks have an opinion about their ride quality and durability. This looks like the safest choice because the parts selections have been made for a Pantera.

On the QA1s, what model name/# and what shock height am I looking for? There are lots of choices with QA1s and I'd like to narrow the search down to what works.

On the Konis, the only price I could find for the 3012s, complete, was $3500. While I'm sure Quella has a better price, I'm not going to bother him because this is just too high a price point for me.

Thanks, Mooso.


QA1 have recently changed all their part numbers, here is the selection of correct for a Pantera single or double adjustable and heim bearing (DS/DD501) or poly bushed (DS/DD502) ends at Summit Racing;

http://www.summitracing.com/se...-length-in/17-000-in

Julian
Today's shocks are mostly not built for mid-engine performance cars. I suspect my gas-charged Koni rear shocks are more lightly valved than the fronts- as they would be if used on a heavy front-engine car. Also, as received the bump rubbers are longer on the 'front' shocks and short on the rears- backwards to what a mid-engine car needs, as shock travel in front should be a little longer before hitting the rubbers. I suggest changing at least the bump-rubbers end for end, and setting front shock adjustable damping one notch lighter than the heavier rears, for any Pantera shocks. On our car, I mounted Koni's 'rear' shocks in front.

By actual measurement, the high pressure anti-foam gas (350 psi!) inside my Koni shocks give about 45 lbs of springing all by themselves, which is additive to whatever the steel springs yield. Remember to take that into consideration when choosing springs for high pressure gas-charged shocks (some gas shocks are low-pressure-charged). Most gas-charged shocks can also be mounted upside-down for a small decrease in unsprung weight and maybe extra convenience in adjusting spring heights.

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