emeraldlion Posted May 6, 2012 Share Posted May 6, 2012 (edited) Has anyone seen these or used them? They have applciations for 240z. Found this while looking into lowering options without coilovers. The isolator seems to be one area to gain a small amount of drop. The insulator on the website photo almost looks to flimsy. Thought I would check with everyone. http://www.nopi.com/dsp_part_detail.php?vnopinum=491+0051&vt=n&vmakeid=270&vpcid=491 Sorry about the missing link, waiting for baby has scrambled my brain. Due this Wednesday. Edited May 7, 2012 by emeraldlion Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NewZed Posted May 7, 2012 Share Posted May 7, 2012 Missing link? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dershum Posted May 8, 2012 Share Posted May 8, 2012 Bump on this...I'm interested in this as an option as well, since I have to replace my front and rear insulators. A full set of front/rears runs about $250 new, and a much less expensive option would be very nice. My application wouldn't be on anything fancy, just on stiffer springs and probably a set of tokico blue's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SleeperZ Posted October 10, 2012 Share Posted October 10, 2012 Just curious, I've read a lot about the rear 240Z strut isolator/insulator being shorter than the 280Z counterpart. Is the front 240Z strut insulator shorter than the 280Z front as well? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
emeraldlion Posted October 10, 2012 Author Share Posted October 10, 2012 This link turned out to be only for the bearing. From what I have found the front/rear 240z insulator is the same thickness as front 280z. The rear 280z insulator is thicker. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cockerstar Posted October 11, 2012 Share Posted October 11, 2012 The 240/280 fronts are the same height. The 240z rear is shorter than the 280z rear isolator. 280z guys can swap in 240z ones for a little drop in the rear. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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