Shit I completely turned that around we were talking about it bottoming out not about not having enough down travel
Wes have you been to this side of the river?
These roads with whoopdodoos this is where my crates and gear goes flying around the back of Jimmy front does OK
even when the shocks were new it seemed like they weren’t able to control the rear that well. View attachment 445321
Can you upload a picture of your rig?You’re absolutely right I want it to drive like a 2020 Tahoe on the streets and a trophy truck off road Haha dreaming
It definitely feels better to me when I switched the 360/80 valved shocks to the rear substantially. The reason I didn’t get the custom ORD springs right off the bat what I had a little more cash. I was worried that getting to and from trails on the freeway it would be too soft and less responsive. Does the overload spring come in to play other than adding 1000 pounds to the back? One of these days I’ll ask my buddy with his GoPro to maybe set it up underneath my truck and see what’s going on back there
Are there pics of your truck on this site?I'm still reading through your thread, but I can say the whoops in Havasu bounce all my stuff around and my 77 is linked in the front and long travel out back. Are you sure you're not asking too much from the suspension to start with? I'll finish the thread, hopefully you've found a solution.
). Please go ahead and search the dozens of threads here on this topic. It takes a really tight valved shock to make the ride stiff - you notice it more in the body roll, handling and rebound. A super stiff spring overwhelms a reasonable shock valving to give you the double-bounce. In the end, if you want good ride quality you will use stock springs, buy custom leaves or go to a link suspension. What I'm talking about is not being able to handle simple bumps in the road. If the main problem is in big whoops off-road, that could be a number of things. If it doesn't ride OK on the road, either something frozen/binding or the spring rate is too high.Wish he had a video series, describing and showing in action this stuff.Great info @Stephen I always learn something when you post![]()
Great info. I am in the process of finding a fabricator/welder near by.1: you're asking quite a bit from that spring system. Not that you can't make it as good as it can be buy anything that could be described as a "whoop" is going to be hard to handle with lift kit springs.
2: the overload spring is definitely coming into play in your suspension and making it really stiff which is exactly what it's designed to do. You can't pull it out as it is a large part of the spring capacity. Sometimes you can turn the overloads over to let the spring pack travel a little further before it starts engaging the overload. This is a case where the spring rate is just too progressive and there's not much you can do to change that without changing the springs.
3: As you've found, there's a lot of room in the shocks for harder offroad use. A good part of why the stiffer valving is helping is that when you get deeper in the rear travel, the spring rate is going up a lot and it's taking more rebound damping to control it. Getting into something that can be valved will help you change stuff to get it better but unless you or a good buddy can do the work, it's often hard to justify paying for a re-valve on a $200 shock. So, learning to take shocks apart or becoming friends with someone who does might be a good thing.
4: get a flat plate of some fashion welded on the axle tube for a strike pad for the bumpstops. When you actually use the stops and they hit on the axle tube, they tend to squirt off the front and back of the tube and it tears the stops off.
5: congratulations on using your suspension and finding it's limits.
6: The front shocks should work better when standing up more vertical, it's good that you felt it. It's not a huge difference but it's there. The best place for a shock on a solid axle is as straight up and down as possible and as close to the wheel as possible. That's not always convenient or necessary to make it good enough but when you start pushing, that's the direction to head.
All for now


