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I got mine installed at AutoFashion on Miramar Rd for $400 and a buddy of mine got his installed and alignment for $450 at SoCal Suspension in El Cajon.
I got mine installed at AutoFashion on Miramar Rd for $400 and a buddy of mine got his installed and alignment for $450 at SoCal Suspension in El Cajon.
thanks John, I had reached out to auto fashion I saw their yelp page I'm guessing that's your model 3 pictures on it, looks good! I'm going to reach out to so cal suspension. I'm about an hour and a half out to the east and need to get it done at a place open on the weekend. Thanks for the recommendations.
 
Anybody has recommendations for a shop in LA, preferably west side (Culver City, Santa Monica and vicinity)? The UP moderate might be just a bit too low for me, so I cannot use them, and I doubt UP would install tsportline or MP performance
 
Anybody has recommendations for a shop in LA, preferably west side (Culver City, Santa Monica and vicinity)? The UP moderate might be just a bit too low for me, so I cannot use them, and I doubt UP would install tsportline or MP performance
Got mine lowered on TSportline in Gardena/Torrance area.
https://www.yelp.com/biz/auto-talent-gardena

Very reputable shop with great competitive pricing!
 
Replaced my early Unplugged Performance moderate springs with their milds last night. Car rides much better, and the noises are gone! The front springs were definitely in coil bind even when fully extended with the moderates. Car does not seem much higher in the front, but the rear is higher and it's lost the reverse rake/squat look, which is good!
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Replaced my early Unplugged Performance moderate springs with their milds last night. Car rides much better, and the noises are gone! The front springs were definitely in coil bind even when fully extended with the moderates. Car does not seem much higher in the front, but the rear is higher and it's lost the reverse rake/squat look, which is good!
View attachment 15047
Looks great, Teslarob! Can I ask where you installed the lowering springs and how much $? I'm still deciding on a shop to install my Mild springs as well.
 
@teslarob, I am hoping to do the same thing. After putting a little over 1600 miles on the UP Moderate springs, I am quite disappointed with the results. I have had coil noises since day one, and the ground clearance is extremely limited. I'm scraping the bottom in places where I never had problems with in my previous car (e92 BMW M3 competition package). It feels like I have very limited suspension travel and the car bounces around way too much. I'm in contact with UP support and hoping they will send me a set of mild springs to try. The car looks great and on smooth roads it is ok, but with any average road bumps it is no good.

Replaced my early Unplugged Performance moderate springs with their milds last night. Car rides much better, and the noises are gone! The front springs were definitely in coil bind even when fully extended with the moderates. Car does not seem much higher in the front, but the rear is higher and it's lost the reverse rake/squat look, which is good!
View attachment 15047
 
Has anyone noticed a measurable improvement in range/efficiency with the lower ride height?
I know that the Cd is very sensitive to slight variations in f/r attitude (ride height changes on one end or the other) and much less sensitive to higher or lower overall by an inch or even a bit more. This is especially true with a car like the model 3 that has a very flat underbelly. Since Tesla did much testing and work to optimize the design for efficiency/range, I would expect they got the f/r attitude correct. Lowered cars are even more sensitive to variations in ride height from front to rear than cars that haven't been lowered. It seems most of the aftermarket lowering springs change the attitude slightly. It's pretty difficult to improve the Cd on a car like the Model 3 unless you happen to get that front/back ride height balance perfect and really easy to make it worse. Then you throw some luggage in the trunk for that road trip and it's all fouled up. Or you hit the sweet spot. It all depends on how the car is loaded with people/gear.

I have the OEM springs (the softer ones after the initial production) and am getting phenomenal efficiency on highway trips at 75 mph. It may be possible to improve that slightly by lowering but probably not by much. And really easy to screw it up, maybe by a lot.
 
Trying to get started with installing my mountain pass coil-overs.

I’ve got the frunk off but have been running around all day trying to find a 13mm socket with walls that are thin enough.

Besides grinding the socket down, any brands that others have used when they installed? Or is grinding the opening larger the only other option. I wonder what the local tuning shops do?
 
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