CK5
Register an account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members.

'81 K5, "BlaZeus"- How to NOT build the ultimate budget K5; 3 & 4 link build

My understanding about jumping vehicles is you should lift off the throttle in the air. If your on the throttle then the tires spin faster in the air than the truck is going..then have slow down when they meet the ground to match the speed of the vehicle and the laws of physics....that shock puts a huge load on your drive train and thats how stuff breaks. what your landing on obviously effects that also.
 
So....finally jumped it...just a little one but I feel like I can finally call it a done deal now that I have gotten some rubber off the ground.
 
Does it feel stiff?? How bout some whoopage pics? I thought this was a Prerunner?
 
350/450 in front. 300/400 in rear.

That is incredibly stiff for the front.. that's why it appears stiff, even more so if you have the secondary rate stops setup properly it'll be like hitting a wall once the 450 comes into play. You need 250/250 and if the back is not on the trailing arm(can't remember) it'll be even lighter than that.
It'll drive 100x better with the proper springs on there.
 
I have a 250 over 300, geometry of the suspension will play in as well.
 
Last edited:
It's 1:1 so it'll probably only have 900-1100 lbs per corner. Maybe less because he doesn't have a core support.

With the shock and spring virtually straight up and down there will be little need for a crazy rate change and right now he's going from 187 in lbs to 450 in lbs, that's crazy.. and you can see it on the jump and landing.
 
Good man! Lots of good videos to analyze what's happening, ok so a couple things, the reason it's a lot better is because you actually have some droop and the spring rates actually still lower than most all lift springs which means it'll still be better than it was.

It'll not sure how much droop you have from ride height so maybe chime in on that. Also keep your eyes peeled on rdc for springs, the springs is what I would touch first because that bases some of what your rebound is going to do and if you lose spring rate you will loose some rebound force from the spring. That aside it looks like the rebound is too slow and there isn't enough compression damping which is why it falls into holes, part of that could be your going to slow. Either way it would help.
If you want help tuning this let me know.
 

Latest Posts

Top Bottom