At the end of the day Super Pro or Nolathane will do the same job and prob cost about the same
Some stuff stolen from the internets
Is Nolathane too hard?
Nolathane formulations have evolved over many years. As the clear market leader in Australia & New Zealand our formulations have become progressively softer whilst becoming stronger. Each bush is designed using the most suitable grade of softness to suit the application. Misinformation spread by small competitors suggests that Nolathane is hard - this is simply old hat! We invite you to compare the "leading brands" and you will find virtually all bushings are now of similar softness. As the Australian & New Zealand markets are so small with only 24 million total population we have focused away from just motor sport application to what we call 'Streetable Polyurethane". In other words you can fit Nolathane products to a family car and obtain good performance improvement without compromising too much on ride, improved handling, steering & in many cases brake response without a harsh ride. Most Polyurethane you might see in the USA or Europe is around 93-95 Durometer shore A as they concentrate on a racing / extreme performance market, less than 1% of the Nolathane range is 93 Duro and these are normally to replace original hard nylon bushings. Most of our products are 74 or 85 Duro. When we design a bush we evaluate the best duro (hardness) for the application and that is what we design to, we do not normally make the same part in different hardness's as we try to pick the best handling / ride compromise.
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Could not find info on the Super Pro duro rating, but found this
SuperPro bushes - Extreme Use Only - durometer
SuperPro bushes - Extreme Use Only - durometer
I thought I would pop this bit of info up in here as it may be useful for others in the future. I was unsuccessful in finding it in my time spent searching the forum database.
I am looking to replace my suspension bushes and I was looking through the SuperPro catalogue <
Find SuperPro Parts for My Vehicle >.
I noticed that for the D2 SuperPro list some of the bushes as a standard part number and some as for 'Extreme use only'. I wondered what the difference was - being for a 4WD could they be softer for flex, or harder?
A phone call to Fulcrum Suspension's (the head company) tech department and the difference is in the durometer rating of the bush (the hardness - see [ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shore_durometer"]Shore durometer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/ame] ). The standard bushes are usually a 70 rating. The extreme bushes are harder and are in the case of the D2, an 80 rating.
The rating of the Extreme use only bushes is identifiable in their part number, e.g.
standard bush - SPF2128K
Extreme use only - SPF2128-
80K
I imagine that most other Land Rovers also have the listing option for harder so thought this information may be useful for others in the future.
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