XJguy said:I was just wondering if it is a benefit or compromise to have retainers for the coils up ontop so that they do not unseat under high flex?
XJguy
KY Chris said:How much flex and how often will it occur? Damn, a spring has to drop pretty far to clear a stock bump stop on an XJ. Seen them pop out of a tj, but that was REALLY flexed.
CRASH said:Is their a DOWNSIDE to capturing a coil?
CRASH
CRASH said:Is their a DOWNSIDE to capturing a coil?
CRASH
I think it would. It would create a gentler transition to set your limiting straps to just a few inches past neutral. Seems smoother in my head any way.CRASH said:I don't think it's a matter of suspension geometry. It's a matter of total travel vs. shock length vs. limiting the end of your travel.
Wouldn't stretching a spring slightly at the end of your suspension travel provide a gentler transition than simply a limit strap?
On high speed stuff, wouldn't it better control the first few inches of uptravel when landing from "flight"?
CRASH
To add to the serious question, I think if the suspension is flexing that much to unseat the coil to fall off, the suspension isn't set up right in the first place, too much flex.
CRASH said:Is their a DOWNSIDE to capturing a coil?
CRASH
It seems that'd be less of an issue with a multipoint mount.basalt51 said:It seems to me that unless you match the limiting strap perfectly to the coil then you are supporting the weight of the axle on whatever thin sheetmetal the spring retainer is bolted to. If the limiting strap is shorter then the spring retainer isn't needed at all.
:dunno: