Member Profile - gtbsti

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Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby gtbsti » Wed Jun 28, 2017 7:50 pm

The original plan after purchasing this MY08 Liberty GT spec.B tuned by STi wagon, was to simply fill it with 98 ron petrol and change the oil every 5000km for it's remaining life. That plan lasted for a few weeks - and after some research and discussion with other lib enthusiasts and a little experimentation, I've finally got a connection of "jinba ittai" with this wagon that's setup for touring duties. Enhancements are all period correct and JDM sourced to ensure the overall feel of the wagon remained true to it's origins without drawing any attention to itself.

Installed additions:
To be Updated

Drag Coefficient
GT Spec B wagon = 0.30 Cd

GT Spec B wagon coil spring rates (in mm/Kg)
OEM GT spec B front 3.5 rear 5.5
STi pinks front 4 rear 6
Swift sport front 4.3 rear 6.6
Prova front 4.35 rear 6.7
RSR Ti 2000 down front 4.38 rear 6.8
SYMS front 4.4 rear 6.5
Tein H tech front 4.6 rear 7
Tein S tech front 5.3 rear 7.2

Article - Belief in our engineering - the Subaru Technica International S402 Legacy Story

"...The 2008 Subaru Legacy STi S402 is their vision of what a mature, high-performance Legacy can be, the best-handling version of Subaru's mainstream model.
Unfortunately there will be just 402 examples of the 2008 Subaru Legacy STi S402, and you can buy one only if you live in Japan. We realized that Subaru had something special for us when we learned that Hideharu Tatsumi would accompany the car for our exclusive drive in the shadow of Mt. Fuji. As Subaru's chief development driver for the last 20 years, Tatsumi has driven the Legacy for thousands of kilometres on the Nurburgring and he understands the car like no one else.

King of the Road
Hideharu Tatsumi has just moved over from Subaru to STi (Subaru Tecnica International), and he's the chief engineer of the 2008 Subaru Legacy STi S402. When we first bumped into him in the public parking area of the Nurburgring Nordschleife back in 2006, he was using a Legacy and an Impreza STi to instruct Subaru's next generation of test pilots on the finer points of the 'Ring. Today he's arrived with the S402. Boasting a chiseled and stocky physique, Tatsumi is tough and direct. He is quick to admit that certain budget restraints on the design side meant that he could not play around with the Legacy's sheet metal very much for this specialty car. "But even with those restrictions," he tells us, "We have a car that looks like it does business and delivers on the road." The S402's unique mesh grille is complemented by flared front fenders that have been widened an extra inch to enclose wider BBS rims and 235/40R18 Bridgestone Potenza RE050A tires. Tatsumi and his chief stylist wanted to also redesign the front bumper section to give the car an even sportier look, but a price tag of around $600,000 for the special mold that would be required quickly put an end to their dreaming. "When you divide our limited run number of just 402 units into $600,000, well, that adds an extra $1,500 to each car. And the bean counters would have none of that," he laments. Fortunately the money STi has saved on cosmetics has been spent on hardware.

Nurburgring Credentials
One look at the specifications sheet suggests that Tatsumi's team had to deal with less budgetary shackles on the engineering side of the equation. In fact, Tatsumi hints that he wouldn't have taken on this job if the STi bosses weren't prepared to let him make the S402 all it could be as far as driving is concerned. To do this, Tatsumi stresses that he had to take this car to his second home for the last two decades - the Nurburgring Nordschleife, "Otherwise Japanese enthusiasts wouldn't have given the car any street cred," he explains. Come to think of it, none of us would have given this JDM (Japanese Domestic Market) car much credence without its Nurburgring credentials, right? It's got to the stage today where any performance car must put in some time at the 'Ring if it's to be taken seriously by rev-heads around the world. Proof of that is that there are now three Japanese supercars " Honda's V10-powered NSX, the Lexus LF-A and the Nissan GT-R” all testing in Germany and vying for lap time honors.

Same Power, More Response
The 2008 Subaru Legacy STi S402 has an Australian-spec, turbocharged EJ255 2.5-liter boxer four-cylinder under its hood, and STi has created a special calibration with a twin-scroll turbo, more boost, a tweaked ECU and low-restriction sports mufflers. This engine's output doesn't seem particularly different from the standard turbo engine, as it pumps out 282 horsepower at 5,600 rpm and 289 pound-feet of torque between 2,000 and 4,800 rpm. In fact, power and torque are both just marginally improved. But as Tatsumi tells us, "That wasn't our aim. We were striving to enhance the whole driving experience." By carefully tuning the S402's boxer to the six-speed manual transmission from the Impreza WRX STi and revising some of the gear ratios, the STi engineers have created an engine that might have been taken straight out of a rally car. Some 95 percent of peak torque is available at just 1,800 rpm and it also pulls strongly right up to 6,000 rpm. As a result, you can now take 2nd-gear corners in 3rd gear thanks to the beefy bottom-end torque and instant throttle response, so there's more traction and more control.

On the Road
As you're extracting the torque from the engine, punching the deliciously notchy shifter and shooting effortlessly around corners, it can be easy to forget the fact that the S402 comes standard with Subaru's SI-drive, which allows you to choose among three modes of power management. For some strange reason (well, maybe not that strange) we found ourselves flicking the SI-drive to the Sport Plus position and testing the upper reaches of the gutsy power curve. If you were to describe the way the S402 responds to the driver, you'd say "instant." There's less play from the throttle action and less wind-up in the drivetrain than you find in the conventional Legacy, so the power seems to get to the wide Bridgestones without wasting time or motion. Subaru's own stability control is also fitted as standard equipment, so the car will catch you if you get into trouble, but intervention comes only after you've exhausted the resources of the exquisitely balanced all-wheel-drive system. The S402 also turns into a corner with instant response thanks to reconfigured steering, and the feedback from the tires is superbly communicative. Tatsumi has tweaked the steering rack with a quick 13.0:1 ratio (replacing the standard 15.0:1 ratio), and then helped the car respond to such inputs with special STi-tuned dampers and springs. But Tatsumi is most proud of the S402's secret weapons for Nurburgring goodness - three 'semi-flexible' reinforcement bars that not only improve chassis rigidity but also tune it. There's one between the top of the front suspension struts, one between the bottom of the front struts, and a third across the rear suspension towers in the trunk.

The Magic of the Bars
The 'semi-flexible' reinforcement bars all have pillow ball joints. As the left and right pieces of each bar are flexibly connected, they can moderately handle longitudinal forces such as from gaps on the road to maintain ride comfort while strongly holding against lateral forces during cornering. As a result, not only cornering performance, but also straight-line stability and ride comfort is improved significantly to to the driver. It goes exactly where you want it to go and keeps all four tires firmly planted at the same time. But more than that, the construction of the three bars with their semi-flexible sections help the chassis absorb those brief, unwanted lurches as the car changes direction, so the car feels magically composed and enhances feedback from the tires just as you'd expect. The combination is pure magic, and the S402 has an overall feel that's as close to perfection as we've ever experienced. It's just a pity about the swanky seats with their soft leather upholstery, which unfortunately don't quite offer the support you need when pushing through fast bends. But then, as Tatsumi pointed out more than once, the S402 is a grand touring car, and it actually rides much better than the high-performance Subaru Legacy GT spec.B with its 18-inch tires.

We don't have to forgive anything about the brakes, though. They are phenomenally powerful, featuring Brembo-built, six-piston, monoblock front calipers and two-piston rear calipers. The S402 might be the first-ever Japanese sedan with a brake package that actually feels overengineered. One STi engineer later admitted that four-piston Brembos would have been more than adequate for the S402, but STi felt this car needed something special. The combination of progressive pedal action, no brake fade and good tire grip means you can go deeper into a corner with the Legacy STi S402 than just about any sedan we've tested before. And because the S402 features standard rotors without slots or drilled holes, there's no risk of cracking these rotors with abuse, and there's no squeal during daily driving, either. Subaru might think the S402 is a simple grand tourer, but we beg to differ. It's got a Momo-built steering wheel with an STi logo, a leather-trimmed S402 shift knob, aluminum-covered pedals, an STi speedo calibrated to 260 km/h, carbon-fiber-style trim, cupholders with special red illumination and a bright red ignition button. This car is plainly built to be punished with speed.

'Ring Ready?
So we had to ask. Tatsumi-san, what settings on the 2008 Subaru Legacy STi S402 did you change after your laps around the Nurburgring? "Ah, none. The car was fine."
Tatsumi has fine-tuned dozens of Imprezas and Legacys to perform at the German mega-track over the past two decades, so we expected nothing less....."

Original MY08 GT Spec B Tuned By STi Sales Flyer -
Liberty STi (Sales Flyer).pdf
(640.6 KiB) Downloaded 125 times

Original MY08 GT Spec B Tuned By STi Parts Flyer -
Liberty STi (Parts Flyer).pdf
(212.89 KiB) Downloaded 125 times


#stiwagonlife
Last edited by gtbsti on Fri Aug 07, 2020 9:32 am, edited 54 times in total.
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Re: Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby bigBADbenny » Sat Jul 01, 2017 12:58 pm

Nice one. Where's the history and mods list (with part numbers :P ) ???
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Re: Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby jarrenowen » Sat Jul 01, 2017 11:48 pm

bigBADbenny wrote:Nice one. Where's the history and mods list (with part numbers :P ) ???

i'm with benny, needs more mods list! lovely ride though.
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Re: Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby norbs » Sun Jul 02, 2017 11:03 am

Looks nice. Hood scoop intrigues me. What's the deal there?
'05 Lib GT with a few mods :-)
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Re: Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby jslayz » Sun Jul 02, 2017 1:31 pm

clean! 8)
CURRENT - ATP GTX 3576 - 22psi - 283.7awkw
OLD - Dom 1.5Xtr - Last dyno 254ahkw, previous 238ahkw, first 224awkw.
My journey thread: http://forum.liberty.asn.au/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=15523
My Lib Pics here: http://forum.liberty.asn.au/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=15523&start=570#p370656
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Re: Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby jarrenowen » Sun Jul 02, 2017 3:24 pm

hooooaaaaaaa Sh*t.
extensive and expensive list. love it.
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Re: Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby gtbsti » Sun Jul 02, 2017 3:25 pm

.
Last edited by gtbsti on Tue Jul 03, 2018 9:16 pm, edited 6 times in total.
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Re: Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby MadmanSean » Mon Jul 03, 2017 11:22 am

Great looking car! Need more pics of the mods :D
Subaru ECU Unbricking, Unlocking and Bench Flashing/Recovery service! Check out SICK CHIPS @ https://www.facebook.com/SickChips/
http://forum.liberty.asn.au/viewtopic.php?f=56&t=35489
If you'd like to say thank you feel free to Buy me a coffee https://www.buymeacoffee.com/sickchips
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Re: Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby bigBADbenny » Tue Jul 04, 2017 12:39 pm

Nice update!

STi S402 alloy rear control arms:
whats this: std spec B alloy trailing arms? Did you go alloy rear upper links too?

SYMS Tierod End Adjuster Kit
SYMS Track Control Arm Support Kit:
hey what are these? Something for the rear lateral arms?

STi front support kit
STi S402 flexible chassis lower brace front
STi S402 flexible chassis brace rear
STi S402 bilstein shocks front
STi S402 bilstein shocks rear:
So this comprises (in conjuction with the tbSTi flexible tower brace std equipment) the entirety of the "S402 chassis enhancement parts"???
Anything "missing" or upgraded from?

DAMD D shape 360mm steering wheel (red stitch):
You can have dibs on my spare black swc's :P then we'll find u a MY10+ (?) black STi hornpad to tie it all together.

There was a USA vendor doing rigi colas for much less than PROVA, (SMY or Mooresport, both NLA?), or go ebay: https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_odkw=R ... 9&_sacat=0
its on my bucket list regardless so dont commit w/o me! :P
Heres and interesting discussion on the GR STi version of same: http://www.iwsti.com/forums/gr-suspensi ... eview.html

STi S402 13:1 quick steering rack:
We'll have to compare this side by side with my yet-to-be installed GR quick rack. The one thing I haven't found out is whether the inner tie rods are the same rack side thread as BP/BL, if not ill need to shave the tie rod to gain some toe adjustability, obviously not an issue for your car :)
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Re: Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby gtbsti » Thu Jul 06, 2017 10:16 am

.
Last edited by gtbsti on Fri May 25, 2018 8:39 pm, edited 7 times in total.
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Re: Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby bigBADbenny » Thu Jul 06, 2017 10:25 am

Link? :P
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Re: Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby gtbsti » Thu Jul 06, 2017 10:27 am

** Reserved for photos **
Last edited by gtbsti on Sun Sep 24, 2017 2:41 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Member Profile - gtbsti

Postby bigBADbenny » Thu Jul 06, 2017 11:03 am

My understanding is the s402 bars allow compression but not expansion between the various mounting points?
Should plan to get it on a hoist for comparison pics :)
Eg with my car that has the genome rigid strut brace, avo h and rear subframe braces & hd mounts ;)
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