I've read nothing but positive reviews on the CS Race RMM. Do you have the one with 70A duro or are you using the 80A duro? When you're crawling in 2nd gear, how does the car drive when you're on/off the throttle? It is this transition that tires me out, when getting on the throttle my car would not so smoothly jerk forward. When getting off the throttle, sometimes it is smooth but usually it gets rough when going down to 1500 RPM. So what I've had to do now is to already clutch in before I get to 1500 RPM, which can be tiring if in stop/go traffic for awhile.I got the old CS Race RMM and GenPu TMM insert on my Juan. Feels solid. Still a slight rock in stop and go but I keep her in 2nd when we are just crawling along. Stock PMM as well.
That's what I thought, especially after looking at the videos again, where they show the OEM RMM vs Stage 2 RMMs stopping the engine from rocking back and forth.The RMM is 90% of the problem in the stock setup. I would replace that first, then down the road, put a Damond TMM in for longevity if nothing else, because the stock TMM bushings can be short lived. Also because it's barley any noisier than stock while holding way better.
That is a no go as I've already tried the DM RMM and it was a little too much NVH for me.If minimal nvh is what is wanted change the rear mount to dm and keep stock tmm/pmm mount. That will clean up some of the crap and keep it livable for a dd.
Having a separate commuter car would be great, but I cannot justify having two cars right now. It is just extra cost/expense that I don't want to have right now. As Chpspd has mentioned, my Speed3 is my daily driver/commuter car. If I cannot make it work with the Speed3, or if I get too tired with the stop/go traffic, the Speed3 will be replaced with a more appropriate comfy commuter car.Sounds like the best solution is to get a cheap but comfy beater/commuter and then get the full Damond package for the Speed when you want to romp on it with absolutely zero torque steer or wheel hop. Such a drastic difference over how the car behaved with stock mounts and stock power.