Corey 78K5
1 ton status
Avery why do you have your shocks on upside down? That could lead to body roll and cause an accident since they do not work properly with the valving in the wrong position...............
WTH dude don't mess with me like that...Corey 78K5 said:Avery why do you have your shocks on upside down? That could lead to body roll and cause an accident since they do not work properly with the valving in the wrong position...............



koldsimer said:Did I miss something? Was that carriage bolt really what you used for your springs?
Entertaining stuff...No I am not messing with you. If your gonna run a truck on the street with 8" of lift the least you could do is make sure the suspension is set up properly and SAFE. There are very few shocks that are designed to run up side down and yours are not. You have a lot to learn Avery...........Avery4jc said:WTH dude don't mess with me like that...
Hmmm shesh I don't know...I always thought they wen't on with the top at the top and the bottom at the bottom...stupid me
Actually they don't even really work...the driver's side is completely empty and the passenger side is so low that it has some big air bubbles in it...that might help the ride quality some
But that's another chunk of $$$ that'll be spent down the road.
Avery4jc said:Uhh yeah...how you missed that I don't know...it's like the entire thread...for some kicks go back and read a whileEntertaining stuff...
That new centering bolt is beefy though...grade 8 is so much stronger it's not even funny...I was able to torque it down and it pulled the springs into place and didn't even feel like it was going to strip like that carriage bolt did when I tightened it down.
Glad to see you get it fixed!Corey 78K5 said:No I am not messing with you. If your gonna run a truck on the street with 8" of lift the least you could do is make sure the suspension is set up properly and SAFE. There are very few shocks that are designed to run up side down and yours are not. You have a lot to learn Avery...........
Avery4jc said:That goes against everything I've ever done with shocks...
you're joking right?

beater_k20 said:since 99% of shocks are manufactured to go that way. generally the shaft is covered by more sheetmetal though.
Shocks have valving in them that are different for absorbing the compression and slowing rebound. If the shocks are on upside down then they will not work as designed. Your factory shocks have the shaft on top but it has a sheet metal hat or tube that the body of the shock will slide into making it look the other way around. Here is how I have mine mounted.Avery4jc said:"that way" as in the body at the bottom or at the top?
Plus why would it matter? There's going to be an o-ring or seal of some kind at the bottom of the body that the shaft slides through to keep the oil inside of the body from coming out...so why would it matter functionality wise which way they are mounted?
SierraClassic said:Well then, guess we all learn something new every day... It seems I have my front shocks on upside down too, lol
That'll change today, kinda odd that Rancho would have the lettering on the tubes upside down...
Avery4jc said:Exactly...thats what I was thinking...it still doesn't make sense why position would matter...regardless of whether the body is moving up and down over the shaft or the shaft is moving up and down through the body the piston will go through the body in the same order....
.Avery4jc said:Exactly...thats what I was thinking...it still doesn't make sense why position would matter...regardless of whether the body is moving up and down over the shaft or the shaft is moving up and down through the body the piston will go through the body in the same order....

And it's still not right! I can't wait till the front!!!!It's got steering!!!!!!!!
