jimgrms
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Oceanside Ca the beach
D W in my 2 jeeps were fixed by a quality alignment ' not a driveway tape measure one
I guess I am confused. If you require a ram to fix death wobble you aren't fixing shit. You are covering it up with the ram. No different than people with dual dampners.
If it can't cruise down road with no dampner or ram without issue you have a problem. Tossing one of those on does not fix the problem.
"An assist ram holds the cross tie rod rock solid so DW can't start."
While it might "hold" the tie rod, your head is still in the wrong place. You're approaching it completely wrong. Unless you fix it WITHOUT the assist on there, your assist has just become a "band-aid" to once again...try and mask the problem.
Believe me when I say suspension actions and geometry as something I'm very, very familiar with.
A damper is a band-aid that *might* mask it. A dampener is in not supposed to be there absorb harmonics per se, that was not the true engineering reason for it. The more "true" engineering reason behind the steering damper (which is actually a bad name for it) was to give the steering a "stiffer" response. You can take a steering damper off, and if your steering is correct...should not be one bit different. I ran without a damper with my crossover when I had it and much preferred it.
If you do NOT fix your issue BEFORE you put the assist on there, you're going to move stress/strain of parts to areas you do not want.
There are many a person on here who will tell you the same thing. I struggled with DW for a while on mine, until I got it all figured out...and it had nothing to do with any of my setups.
OK.. Y'all have that discussion with Crawlertech.. they couldn't come up for the DW fix for the previous owner of this jeep either.
ALL new steering parts, heavier DOM tie rods, top of the line hiems, OTK steering arms, ball joints, track bar... Talking with people till I'm blue in the face. Letting people that are supposed to be more experienced or 'qualified' than me inspect the set-up.. more research than I can even begin to relate to you... all with the same answer; "You got me..."
Band-aid? hardly. It is a viable, and usually permanent fix, and no one on an internet forum will lead be to believe it is not. When something solves a problem 100% how is that a band aid?
If I had unlimited funds to swap rim/tire combos, knuckles, different brands this and that until I found the right combo to eliminate it.. I might.
Fact of the matter is I don't, and after exhausting all other avenues of possibilities, a ram is now going on, along with it's other obvious offroad benefits that come with it.
I really hate DW discussions ... everyone has their high horse opinion, experience, hard line thoughts and parroting what they read on other forums on the matter. And in the end, what fixes one vehicle doesn't fix the another.
**** it Dude, lets go bowling.
Thanks for the offer.If you can wait a month until I am back in town, I would be happy to take a look at it for you. I have solved more DW problems than you can count on your fingers.
For information, the damper is really more to keep the shock from hitting things like curbs and such from being felt so severely on the steering wheel. It may stop the DW but it does not fix the underlying problem that will most likely come back at a later time.
OK.. Y'all have that discussion with Crawlertech.. they couldn't come up for the DW fix for the previous owner of this jeep either.
ALL new steering parts, heavier DOM tie rods, top of the line hiems, OTK steering arms, ball joints, track bar... Talking with people till I'm blue in the face. Letting people that are supposed to be more experienced or 'qualified' than me inspect the set-up.. more research than I can even begin to relate to you... all with the same answer; "You got me..."
Band-aid? hardly. It is a viable, and (edit out;usually) most likely a permanent fix, and no one on an internet forum will lead be to believe it is not. When something solves a problem 100% how is that a band aid?
If I had unlimited funds to swap rim/tire combos, knuckles, different brands this and that until I found the right combo to eliminate it.. I might.
Fact of the matter is I don't, and after exhausting all other avenues of possibilities, a ram is now going on, along with it's other obvious offroad benefits that come with it.
I really hate DW discussions ... everyone has their high horse opinion, experience, hard line thoughts and parroting what they read on other forums on the matter. And in the end, what fixes one vehicle doesn't fix the another.
**** it Dude, lets go bowling.
Noted and respected :thumbup:Please don't think I'm trying to rag on you at all, I'm really trying to help as I had DW worse than most here will ever have to feel...it ripped by trackbar bracket and half my coil bucket off on my way from Moab at 1AM in the morning going on the off ramp from I-76 to I-25. Nothing like having to use ratchet straps to hold your front end together and drive so slow that it takes you 2.5 hours to get form Denver to Fort Collins.
As far as CrawlerTech, I know Josh...and he knows his sh*t. I'll be doing some serious wheeling with him once the buggy gets wrapped up. DW is one of those that is such a menace at tracking down. There are so many variables at play that just a few of them being slightly off can cause mayhem.
"When something solves a problem 100% how is that a band aid?"
What your not seeing is stress transfer. The reason it might feel like it is a 100% fix is that since it is a hydraulic system, you have more "force" over how the steering moves. The main difference is that it still WANTS to DW, your just able to "hold" more force with the hydraulics. Problem is, the fact that it still want to DW many times causes the stress to head elsewhere...in many cases that being the frame.
If I were able to I'd be more than willing to lend a helping hand when Tom takes a look at it too.
Mine took a long time to figure out due to it not being easy to see at all. What I found on mine is that the several different "layers" spot welded together under/near the trackbar mount started to separate. I didn't see it because the trackbar bracket hid it. Plating the frame round the trackbar would have been the only cure (I found stress cracks and tears in the frame under the trackbar bracket as well).
In essence, the assist might help "cure" it, but it does not "fix" it.
If DW can't start, then the stresses are not there. I get that all of our mods, and oversize tires are not what this 'frame' was designed for, else we wouldn't have the need for steering box braces, frame stiffeners, blah blah blah. Are they viable fixes or just band-aids that cover up an underlying problem?What your not seeing is stress transfer. The reason it might feel like it is a 100% fix is that since it is a hydraulic system, you have more "force" over how the steering moves. The main difference is that it still WANTS to DW, your just able to "hold" more force with the hydraulics. Problem is, the fact that it still want to DW many times causes the stress to head elsewhere...in many cases that being the frame