emr1101
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Raleigh, NC
yea REs rear packs are real stiff, the last thing htey wanted when they designed them was somehting that sagged
OBXJ said:Think i paid right around 200 shipped for them. Definitely worth the $$
http://store.jksmfg.com/merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=ACOS&Store_Code=JKS01&Category_Code=Coil_Spring
XJ_ranger said:once your coil unseats from the top mount, and you're no longer 'pushing' the axle into the ground, its no longer useful IMO...
vetteboy said:There's three reasons why I don't buy that argument.
1- as long as you're not maxing the shock or hanging from the limit straps, you've still got the weight of the axle and tire/wheel. Especially with heavy bias-ply, aggressive tires, this might just get you enough forward traction. I'll also throw out there that there's times when my rig feels superbly balanced with a coil unseated an inch or two, and it stays that way until it actually lifts the tire off the ground. Then you get that 'rocking' feeling from the extra weight hanging off that corner.
2- if the opposite side is on the bumpstop, you've got a cantilever action happening at the bumpstop point. We know that the tire will travel more vertically during flex than during straight bump travel, and that extra bit of upward movement translates to downward force on the other tire.
3- lateral traction. If the tire's in the air it offers none; if it's on the ground, again the weight of it + some of the axle can help hold a line or a sidehill.
I've got 4" up and 8" down right now and I've got no reason to tweak that. I have center limit straps to avoid binding out the u-joints, but even with the coils unseated an inch or two nothing binds and it feels great, so it stays like that for now. Keep in mind that's the entire purpose of a tender/zero-rate coil on a coilover anyway; to keep the springs in line when they're unseated off the stops, which happens often.
The counter-argument that most people come back with is "get custom/better springs". To get springs that didn't unseat over the range of travel I've got, they'd be incredibly soft, and I don't want a softer spring rate than what I'm running already. Also, by the last inch or two of travel, the difference between a soft spring and an unseated spring would pretty much be moot anyway. The only other alternative is to limit the droop before the coil drops out, which doesn't appeal to me for the reasons I mentioned before, and honestly seems kind of pointless IMO. As long as you're not binding anything, maxing anything out, and have a decent way to control the coil so that it doesn't exit the vehicle entirely, it's not hurting anything.
emr1101 said:It says $263, how'd you manage to pay $200 shipped??
tbburg said:TNT: It's also common for rock crawlers to install 1500 LB winches attached to both axles to "suck up" the suspension and limit droop.
And, who in their right mind would run weighted tires in any non-competition situation? Try stopping from 60MPH with 250lb of water in each tire. Or try changing a tire!
tbburg said:TNT: It's also common for rock crawlers to install 1500 LB winches attached to both axles to "suck up" the suspension and limit droop.
And, who in their right mind would run weighted tires in any non-competition situation? Try stopping from 60MPH with 250lb of water in each tire. Or try changing a tire!
vetteboy said:There's three reasons why I don't buy that argument.
1- as long as you're not maxing the shock or hanging from the limit straps, you've still got the weight of the axle and tire/wheel. Especially with heavy bias-ply, aggressive tires, this might just get you enough forward traction. I'll also throw out there that there's times when my rig feels superbly balanced with a coil unseated an inch or two, and it stays that way until it actually lifts the tire off the ground. Then you get that 'rocking' feeling from the extra weight hanging off that corner.
2- if the opposite side is on the bumpstop, you've got a cantilever action happening at the bumpstop point. We know that the tire will travel more vertically during flex than during straight bump travel, and that extra bit of upward movement translates to downward force on the other tire.
3- lateral traction. If the tire's in the air it offers none; if it's on the ground, again the weight of it + some of the axle can help hold a line or a sidehill.
I've got 4" up and 8" down right now and I've got no reason to tweak that. I have center limit straps to avoid binding out the u-joints, but even with the coils unseated an inch or two nothing binds and it feels great, so it stays like that for now. Keep in mind that's the entire purpose of a tender/zero-rate coil on a coilover anyway; to keep the springs in line when they're unseated off the stops, which happens often.
The counter-argument that most people come back with is "get custom/better springs". To get springs that didn't unseat over the range of travel I've got, they'd be incredibly soft, and I don't want a softer spring rate than what I'm running already. Also, by the last inch or two of travel, the difference between a soft spring and an unseated spring would pretty much be moot anyway. The only other alternative is to limit the droop before the coil drops out, which doesn't appeal to me for the reasons I mentioned before, and honestly seems kind of pointless IMO. As long as you're not binding anything, maxing anything out, and have a decent way to control the coil so that it doesn't exit the vehicle entirely, it's not hurting anything.
OBXJ said:here ya go.. The bolt for the rear bumper looks like it may be rpeventing the shackle from rotating backwards(and up) What do you think?
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