Sorry to pull up a month old thread, but I wanted to add my experience in with adjusting the torsion bars on my 2001 D22, as no one has mentioned the possible danger with doing this!
I put some 45mm rear leaf springs in the rear and decided to wind the torsion bars up as I did not want stiffer front suspension, and had read many posts about it being no problem for around a 40mm lift. My front end had sagged, so I needed to move the bars two splines around to get the lift. Drivers side had popped out of the adjusting bracket and the retaining circlip had managed to pull through the hole, so that was probem number one. After getting that sorted, I rotated the bar, then adjusted up to what I estimated was right (this done with side jacked up and a stand under her, so full droop on the front.
Dropped it down, feeling good about it all as the front drivers was much more in line with the rear lift.
Moved onto passenger side, jacked it up so wheel was at full droop, got bar off OK, rotated the spline, started to wind up the adjuster, got nearly to the tension of the other side and BANG, the bolt broke. I didn't know that at the time, all I knew was my hand was thrown to the floor with decent force, and my ratchet ended up halfway over the other side of the garage floor.
So as a word of caution, these bolts can snap, and the unleashed force of the wound up bar is significant (still have brusing to prove it)
I have now bought some replacement high tensile bolts, and when adjusting up will have the vehicle jack underneath the adjuster arm, just in case it lets go again.
Hope this avoids someone else injuring themselves, sorry for the long winded post!
Cheers,