A good day playing (mod) catchup, power pipe and JB Speed roof spoiler thoughts
Thx!
https://mbworld.org/forums/c63-amg-w...bars-sale.html




Agree with Crya. The chassis bars made the car handle very flat. Much less chassis flex and more immediate response to steering input. Able to hold much higher g’s in turns too. After the braces and sways and a million other things, I found myself lifting both inside wheels at VIR in turn 14. I didn’t really notice any difference in under/oversteer, maybe a touch more push if anything.
Last edited by BLKROKT; Apr 18, 2019 at 03:46 PM.




https://mbworld.org/forums/c63-amg-w...bars-sale.html
Agree with Crya. The chassis bars made the car handle very flat. Much less chassis flex and more immediate response to steering input. Able to hold much higher g’s in turns too. After the braces and sways and a million other things, I found myself lifting both inside wheels at VIR in turn 14. I didn’t really notice any difference in under/oversteer, maybe a touch more push if anything.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
Fast forward to today. I saw a member selling ARP head studs for a small discount. Wouldn't that be nice I thought. Might as well snag them for the eventual repair! Save a few hundred bucks. But wait, for some reason, I don't know why, it dawned on me that since owning the car I never bothered checking with the dealer network for service history of the car. Figured long shot as I knew some of the car's history was back in Illinois. I said what the hell, slow day in the office why not call over to my local dealer. They put me on hold. When she comes back on the line she says "the only note we have here is that in June 2012 a broken head bolt was repaired". WHAT???? Could it be? Was my car already fixed?? She said to call the actual repair dealership in the mid-west as they might have more details! I can't tell you how much relief I started feeling. Surely they had done the repair properly in 2012. The car would have been under warranty probably. Well....YES. Updated bolts and buckets were done on my car in 2012 with 44,000 miles on the clock at a cost of $4500. I can't believe I never bothered to check this out. Like I said, figured it was a long shot. Anyways, lottery won. Car has 72,000 miles now and I can finally stop looking at swapping to a FL to avoid the bolts. Moral: Research your VIN history people. You never know...
https://mbworld.org/forums/interior-...4-c63-amg.html
Oh and did the foil on the bottom of the air boxes.
Last edited by Crya; Apr 22, 2019 at 11:49 AM. Reason: Added Brake Duct Link
Next up working on a lighter battery solution for my budget. Nothing new here. But did you know there’s a random 2 pound chunk of plastic directly in front of battery? Why is it there? Why does it weigh two pounds? The p/n lists it as battery tray. Weird. Deleted!
https://www.mercedesbenzstarparts.co...ray-2046190048
Last edited by Crya; Apr 24, 2019 at 10:58 PM.
https://www.summitracing.com/parts/aaf-all42152
In fact, I think I still have 6ft of this still stuff BNIB if you want it... Just PM me.
Oh, and that 2lb piece of plastic just looks like a spacer to keep the OEM battery in position. Be careful to check the CA and CCA on that lightweight battery though... These motors are very high compression and it may not have enough oomph to turn it over or just wear out prematurely. Many times their Ah are much lower too, which can **** off sensitive electronics in these newer cars so don't get surprised if you start throwing misc. codes or get a CEL.
Last edited by BITRBO; Apr 25, 2019 at 10:50 AM.
Re the battery, they're tons of threads on here about people running this battery type, whether it's Deka or the Braile. While it's not as awesome as say, Mr. Rokt's trick $1,000 lithium battery, it still only weighs 15 lbs and turns over the motor. We shall see if it's viable. I only have a 5 mile commute so my concern is it getting enough charge in city driving to maintain. All in, the battery and new mount should be 20 lbs, so that'll be an entire 40 pound weigh savings from battery mod alone.
Good to have a fabricator in the fam - that' my pops. Backing plates should be a fairly quick & easy job actually; just make sure the inlet is as close to the hub as possible... You don't want to just shoot air at the rotor face, but rather direct the flow at the hub/bearing and force it through the veins of the rotor (from the inside out). The former components get hot AF actually and will totally contribute to overall rotor/caliper temps.








