DeaconBlue said:
Moving the battery to the trunk, using rear struts with increased rebound control, installing the "brake plugs" and/or if you have large enough front brakes - the use of the 11.6" rear setup are basically the only option we have here. That combined with firmer front springs and more compression control in the front struts will also help. But please remember that all of this will make for a much firmer ride - which isn't always good on the street.
I don't see any reason (aside from owner sloth, which I fall prey to myself at times) for any SHO that's not a bone-stock preservation candidate to have the battery under the hood. The weight's in the worst possible place, the location makes maintenance harder and results in shorter battery life from engine heat.
I've been quite happy thus far with the Tokicos in the white car. I never liked the Konis, no matter how adjusted, and years later I now find the Tokicos do pretty much everything IMO a strut should do on a SHO. The front Konis were always too stiff in jounce, but too soft in rebound even adjusted full-stiff, and they were not a happy combination with the Eibachs. Maybe front Tokicos because the Konis suck, but rear Konis to get the rebound-adjustability for track use...
The problem with the plugs is that without the metering valve the SHO has far too much rear brake. This is, I'm sure, to some extent dependent on which front brakes you're running, but with my old 12.5in Baers and 38mm PBR calipers plugs mean lots of rear lockup. ABS is no substitute for a properly balanced brake system. Way-back-when I tried plumbing the rear brakes on the black car into a pair of Wilwood proportioning valves and bypassing the metering valve, even at full-restriction (57%?) the car could lock the rear wheels before the fronts were doing much.
Changing the hydraulic ratio might help - the Cobra rear calipers have a much smaller piston (the calipers are smaller overall) and might help, I'd just like to be able to run the things without the extra weight of the bigger-diameter rotor since even a stock 10in rotor is more than enough.
DeaconBlue said:
Using the Gen III rear SFB in all four locations vs. solid SFB will help with ride comfort as well. They are directional and offer much better control vs. any Gen I/II units. Again solid SFB are not always the best for use on the street.
What I find interesting is that the '98 Sable from which my subframe came had four-stud front mounts like the early Taurus in the front holes and what you call the gen 3 bushings in back. I have to conclude that there's some reason Ford did that - either compliance or steering behavior. I was planning to run a pair of my fifteen-year-old-never-used blue police mounts in the front holes and the gen 3 mounts in back once the thing goes into the car.