'96 Conti

TeKK

LVC Member
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Jan 10, 2005
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North Port
My Continental has 75,000 miles and the front right tire is starting to sit low, making my compressor kick in far to often. I know I have to do something about my suspension soon, but I want to hear from someone who got the coil suspension, does it really make the ride that much worse? Is it worht the cost to replace/fix the air suspension? Another matter, and much more important. is where can I find a Lincoln or continental logo front license plate, because I need one.
 
We have two Continentals with factory front coils. I don't think they ride that well and they don't handle well either. Someone who has driven a factory coil sprung car and a full air ride car has noticed better ride and handling with the full air suspension. I'd keep it for those reasons. If I absolutely had to, I'd use junkyard parts off a '97-'02 to convert the front.
 
jrhartman, you are a savior, I'm ordering a plate right now. The '97-'02 suspension conversion, is that a much better suspension than mine from '96 or should I order Stutmasters or Arnotts's replacments?
 
TeKK said:
jrhartman, you are a savior, I'm ordering a plate right now. The '97-'02 suspension conversion, is that a much better suspension than mine from '96 or should I order Stutmasters or Arnotts's replacments?

no problem, thanks for sending them your business...they are a sponsor on a site (www.oldsmobileforums.com) that I am an administrator on !!
 
Air Struts
I had one side go out in my 96 cont. I replaced both fronts with active coil overs from stutmaster. These struts by pass the load leveling in front, but let you adjust the ride frimness. Thats what strutmaster says. I took me 2 years lots of agrivation to get them to work. If the ride is not exactly the same with the coil overs as the air struts, the computer will throw codes and the car rides very stiff, Every tar line shakes the car and passengers! Lincoln dealers will not look at it, speed shops screw arround for weeks at a time, and give the car back basically telling me the car is F...ed up. Strut master says go look at the trouble codes and fix the problem.
Problem codes were left front time out up, right front time out down. This means the ride height sensors need to be recalibrated. This procedure requires a Star Testor ll. This is an expensive dealer code reader. I located one, and the recalibrate procedure requires the suspension to go into the test mode. This will cause the suspension to raise up and lower to test output of the sensors, pump, lines solinoids. Once this is performed, this star tester will allow the suspension height to be adjusted, saved, and thus calibrated.
With the coil over struts, the up down setup test will not cycle and the calibration is over, no adjusting or calibration will be set. In other words Strutmaster said they cannot help me any more. The car rides like a rock, and the computer keeps throwing a code.
I was able to fix the problem my self. Don't ask me why the engineers at strutmasters could'nt figure it out. I placed the car on a level surface, used a volt meter to monitor the voltage out put of the front ride height sensors, reaching in with a 11mm box wrench, I adjusted the sensors to the correct voltage. Turned the car off, reset the computer, start the car, problem solved!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Now the car rides great, I can adjust the ride stiffness, no error codes and the rear leveling works. The bad part is, had I checked the voltage in the first place, I would not have had to replace the air strut with the coil over in the first place, a very expensive mistake.
Some times you just have to tell the EXPERTS, to go jump in the lake, and think for your self. If you have any questions and you think I can help, contact me by e mail.
Christo.
chris.stoffels@comcast.net
 

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