- 1,096
- Higz7
This seems to come up a lot. So I'll try to sum up both.
The engine rebuild feature basically takes your engine, strips it down, puts new parts in (such as pistons, valves, seals etc.) and puts the engine back together. The reason it will swap these parts is because these items can become warn overtime, meaning the engine will not run as smoothly as it did when it first rolled at the factory. Thus meaning that the engine rebuild feature is for relatively old cars, cars that are say, no more than 10 years old shouldn't need an engine overhaul. (This remains the case UNLESS the car is very high mileage)
As for the chassis restore option. This option takes the chassis (or the chassis / body of the car) and rebalances it as overtime it can become slightly twisted (so to speak) meaning that it will not perform at it's optimum. This will affect the handling of your car hugely! The chassis can also become twisted from multiple accidents, crashes on the road in real life can twist a chassis so imagine what a heavy impact can do! From my experience I have never had a car that has needed this option so I think this should only be used if your car is handling like a complete pig!
Hope that helps. If anyone feels there should be any additions then please add it on below
The engine rebuild feature basically takes your engine, strips it down, puts new parts in (such as pistons, valves, seals etc.) and puts the engine back together. The reason it will swap these parts is because these items can become warn overtime, meaning the engine will not run as smoothly as it did when it first rolled at the factory. Thus meaning that the engine rebuild feature is for relatively old cars, cars that are say, no more than 10 years old shouldn't need an engine overhaul. (This remains the case UNLESS the car is very high mileage)
As for the chassis restore option. This option takes the chassis (or the chassis / body of the car) and rebalances it as overtime it can become slightly twisted (so to speak) meaning that it will not perform at it's optimum. This will affect the handling of your car hugely! The chassis can also become twisted from multiple accidents, crashes on the road in real life can twist a chassis so imagine what a heavy impact can do! From my experience I have never had a car that has needed this option so I think this should only be used if your car is handling like a complete pig!
Hope that helps. If anyone feels there should be any additions then please add it on below