Wildfire007;1966997 said:
I've never really understood the difference between a strut and a shock. Maybe that makes me sound like a car noob, but I thought our cars had struts so if they don't have struts then I obvious don't know the difference lol.
A lot of people are unfamiliar with the difference between the two and often use the words interchangeably, probably because the two devices look so similar.
Shock absorbers have one job in a suspension. To control compression and rebound rates. Thats it. In and of themselves they have no effect on the geometry. The rest of the suspension will have individual dedicated pieces to control all the other forces encountered. This means a lot of parts driving the cost up and why you don't see them on bottom line cars. This is the dampening device our car uses, and IMO the better suspension design.
Struts on the other hand generally preform multiple jobs on a cars suspension. The easiest thing to spot is if the strut is the steering pivot point for the front wheel housing. The strut cartridge literally rotates around the steel piston rod coming out the top of the strut. It is an integrated part of the suspension geometry. And as this one part does several jobs, it makes the suspension cheaper to produce.
I have to admit though, that strut based setup have become incredibly competent in recent years, adjustability can be limited but if the factory designed the geometry correctly from the factory they can be quite good.
Concerning the strut brace, as has been mentioned, all of the suspension components whose geometry can be affected by torsional forces are fully bolted to two very sturdy subframes. Not to the thin metal of the body. As such putting a strut brace on top does nothing.
For the OP, as I avoid Facebook like the plague, I can only assume the kind of insanity that ensued.