
davetherave
VIP Member
- Messages
- 58
- Vehicle
- T6 Ocean 204
Thing of lowering my ocean 204 dsg any thoughts or advice much appreciated 

nice one thanks for your input+ Better ride , more stable on the motorway and in wind , looks way cool
- its 30mm lower , so unless your planning on rallying its a no brainer![]()
And if you have a 2mtr High garage door your van willl go under with ease.nice one thanks for your input
That's one off the reasons i need to do this plus better handling been quoted £460 by Vw smg Croydon seems fair price
Standard Suspension 21,000 miles and tyres measured by VW at 5.0 mm tread front and rear equal across full width, and that's 4Season tyres.I can only speak about my T5 4MOTION
but suffice to say my findings are as follows.
1- Fully loaded (possibly overloaded) with camping gear bikes surfboards barbecues etc it has never once bottomed out.
We never travel light and anyone who knows me will testify to this
2- After 15k miles all four tyres are within 2mm of needing changing and the wear is completely even across the width of them all.
The proof of the pudding is in the eating as they say.
Volkswagens should allways be lowered its the law![]()
Volkswagens should allways be lowered its the law![]()
Standard Suspension 21,000 miles and tyres measured by VW at 5.0 mm tread front and rear equal across full width, and that's 4Season tyres.
So you get 15,000 miles down to 3.6 mm and I get 21,000 miles down to 5 mm.
So, roughly speaking I'll probably get an additional 10,000 miles, or more, on my standard suspension compared to your lowered.
So, some back of the envelope calculations, over 2 tyre changes for me you'll have 3. At a very conservative cost of £600/tyre change for 4 tyres.
I see. Makes sense to spend £450 +/- labour to spend an extra £600 every 60,000 miles. Great value for aesthetics that you can't see when driving.![]()
That's interesting, especially about the wallowing ride and motorway experience. I have to say the one I have feels pretty planted and stable as a rock on the motorway but I still need to go more mileage to be sure.My mileage amount was a guess as the van is in the garage and I really couldn't tell you exact how many miles it's done today.
.My tyre measurements were also "back of the envelope " guesstimates, it could be 2mm it could be 3.6 , my point Was , that the wear is even across them
Thus debunking the myth that lowering by 25-30 mm ruins the camber setting as mentioned earlier.
Have the big improvements to the ride and handling been forgotten?
I could not live with the standard Vw wallowing ride, or worrying that a strong gust of wind would put me half way into the next lane n the mway . I did try it for a full season before deciding to get the springs fitted.
IF there is an extra cost attached to tyres then I would find it a price worth paying.
Loosing 30mm height has never stopped me reaching a surf spot either !
I'll get my coat now .
I agree with your conclusions, (uprated shocks would give a better ride and retain the ride height) the thing is that VW fit the springs as standard on some of their vans and offer them as an option on others so they are already "tried and tested" and readily available.Reading loads about 'lowering' being the solution to handling/feel issues but never see any mention of shock absorbers, dampers.
My experience over many years of car, not van, handling improvements was that simply fitting uprated, preferably adjustable ones, dampers had far more beneficial effect on road holding than simply changing springs.
Changing only the springs gives a mismatch between the damping settings and the new springs.
Personally I wouldn't go lower than 30mm as suspension travel becomes limited, think of how the Cali is going to react to a bump on the drivers front wheel and a hole on the passenger rear wheel.
Most photos show unladen lowered Cali's. It would be more realistic to show the vehicle with Driver & Passenger plus normal travelling gear onboard, some will get a shock at the difference.
I'll put my wooden spoon back in the drawer now.
That site looks like a good find, I remember swapping my T2 standard shocks to Gas ones and the difference was amazing.Found this supplier who seem to cover every option.
http://www.t4srus.co.uk/vw-t5-suspension-711-c.asp
I'm favouring air personally but will see how standard set up is. as & when I get it.
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