My goodness, do you ever pay attention? Lol
We had a discussion about the front ride height. It will be a couple inches over stock.
The spring should collapse quite a bit.
Yes, I do sometimes pay attention. I remember the discussion in question. I remember you saying that it would be equal or slightly higher than stock. Those springs, with an axle under them, look like you're going to gain a whole lot more than that. The springs won't compress that much, will they?
Making an estimation from that one crummy, angled shot, it looks like the bottom of the unladen spring is no more than one inch above the bottom of the rim. Assuming a 16" rim (8" radius to that lip, about in line with the spring), and a 3" axle tube, the center of that wheel is 8" + 1.5" = 9.5" above the new unsprung hub position. That's alot, and spring compression isn't going to be that much unless you go negative.
Taken from a different approach, if I draw a line between the end points of your spring, it looks like it clips the top of your lower ball joint. I can't see your shackle angle, so I don't know how much upward movement the rear end of the spring will have when it compresses, but it's not going to be a whole lot. If you compressed the spring all the way flat, it would still be a little bit below this imaginary line (by the thickness of the leaves and the offset of the bushings). But the line is already several inches below the center of the hub. And the axle will add at least 1.5" of height (probably more like 2" now that I think about it).
Bottom line, unless that picture has me mislead, you're gaining more than a couple of inches with that new setup. That's why I asked about a spring-under setup. I just can't see getting close to stock height otherwise.
Take some measurements of your current fender heights and see how far wrong I am when the smoke clears.