Rear Strut Brace
Discussion
I took the one that came fitted to my 1.8 '5 off for a few weeks and did notice that it didn't feel quite as sharp as it did before but it wasn't a huge difference. The massive difference came when I fitted a proper 4 point bolt-down roll bar, the car feels so much more rigid now and I'm very happy with the difference. Were I looking again I'd ignore the cabin braces and look straight for a roll bar that bolts down to the floor.
skinny said:
not for the sort of money they go for, imo (tho i've never tried one). you'll get more improvement from a decent cabin brace bar (the stock ones are quite floppy) and a roll bar, and they make the car look better too 
How much do they go for?
To be honest if someone turned up at my front door and waved a small denomination note at me I'd probably hand it over.
skinny said:
not for the sort of money they go for, imo (tho i've never tried one). you'll get more improvement from a decent cabin brace bar (the stock ones are quite floppy) and a roll bar, and they make the car look better too 
Isn't the OP talking about a cabin brace bar? (between the seatbelt mounting points).
I'd quite like a rear shock tower brace, but agrees, they're way too expensive for what they are.
yeah i think that's right, they came on the post '94 1.8's, but i'm not sure if the late 1.6's got them or not.
certainly the early ones didn't, and if yours came without, you may need to trim the plastic seatbelt tower covers, and work out a way to get a nut underneath where the brace bar bolts on to.
certainly the early ones didn't, and if yours came without, you may need to trim the plastic seatbelt tower covers, and work out a way to get a nut underneath where the brace bar bolts on to.
I bought a cabin brace bar off TR Lane. To be fair, it was a bit expensive for what it was (£30-40) but it does make a very good camera mount! They can be bought cheaper second hand - check out For Sale on Nutz.
I can't comment on added stiffness as I ran with an OEM brace before and have a cross-braced five-point roll bar, which does make the car a lot stiffer. As far as I know, the cabin brace was introduced as some kind of side-impact strengthener, to stop the cabin collapsing if the car gets T-boned.
As for mounting, the TRLane bar mounts to the seat-belt mounts - so no cutting away plastic (I don't think) and no trying to find a way to screw a nut inside the rear wing!
Hope that helps,
ND
I can't comment on added stiffness as I ran with an OEM brace before and have a cross-braced five-point roll bar, which does make the car a lot stiffer. As far as I know, the cabin brace was introduced as some kind of side-impact strengthener, to stop the cabin collapsing if the car gets T-boned.
As for mounting, the TRLane bar mounts to the seat-belt mounts - so no cutting away plastic (I don't think) and no trying to find a way to screw a nut inside the rear wing!
Hope that helps,
ND
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