The yellow are too soft, as the deform under load. The blacks offer much better lateral support under braking/steering loads, whilst the flanges are pliable enough to allow the wishbone to pivot as per the originals

The bushes do indeed come as two halves

Mine have been sliced horizontally so the flange and the part that sits in the wishbone are separate, hence four parts

The reason for this is due to the way I trialled the bushes...
MK 1. Yellow bushes fitted intact. Too soft, with control issues during braking/cornering.
MK 2. Black bushes sliced, with the core fitted to the wishbones, using yellow flanges as it was felt that the black flanges might be too hard. Better handling, but still odd characteristics under load, as the yellow flanges were deforming, allowing the arm to move vertically in the subframe, not ideal.
MK 3. Yellow flanges swapped out with the black ones. Effectively four layers, this allows an amount of slippage as the arm pivots under load, so the arm is supported adequately but is not locked in place.
Car is set up with zero toe, as per Wheels in Motions' advice, jury is out as to whether it needs some toe or not, but steering is as pin sharp as a steering box allows, (so it is a little vague in a straight line when the steering box is slack). However chuck it into a corner, and the steering weights up nicely with a reasonable amount of feel

With regards the Power flex kit, you can file the dished washers into a box in the shed/recycling bin. The stainless bushing is needed but requires 1mm to be ground off each end as it's a touch too long. I have also fitted a sleeve to mine as the ID of the steel bushings is 16mm (against 14mm for the bolt). This technically isn't essential as the clamping force of the vertical bolt should hold the bushing securely in place. For this sleeve I used a 15mm copper pipe cut 1mm shorter than the bushing and sliced along its length

Hopefully that answers most questions, but if you think of any more, just shout
