mudhog
THEGAME
do you still have the reamer?
Yes I still have the reamer .mudhog said:do you still have the reamer?
thanks for the info guys

southernspeed said:Have you driven it yet? How does it feel to you and did yours pull it around over the springs at all?
hmmm... post up if you find out why or a way to stop/limit it at all. I haven't driven mine yet as I'm still doing the rear end but when i turned it around in the street in was pretty weird!mudhog said:yes a did drive it around the block and it dose make the springs pop
I have a little movement with mine but I'm also not running a sway bar . I have 6" dodge springs (reverse eye) and only using the first 2 main springs and then 5 chevy rears to complete the pack . I think most of the movement is going to be from the shackles flexing side to side . I'm debating building a pan had bar with quick disconect pins so I can run with out it in areas where I need all the flex I can get . The cross over set up steer's really quick over the original set up but it's not any thing like my MR2southernspeed said:Have you driven it yet? How does it feel to you and did yours pull it around over the springs at all?
. the burb does creak like a sinking battle ship when I'm going over the rock's and stuff . mostly when really working the suspension .I drive mine to the trail and sometimes around the local hood for a trip up to the parts store or whatever . I still get a slight bit of death wobble up to aboot 25mph sometimes and I do have a steering dampner in the stock location and I did shim the kingpins springs . I also have new 42's up front and when I had the worn out 42's I didn't have a problem . I would run cross over on a street driven rig . I think the stress of big tires really makes it worse . When I had the 36" bias Iroks I never had a issue with wobbles . I don't think a panhard bar would hurt but I would only do it if you are not running a swaybar . It would seem to me that a swaybar would limit your side to side movement but would limit your flex and also make your ride alot stiffer .jayweb said:so - am I correct in assuming that crossover steering is not a good idea for a street driven vehicle? is it that unstable? mines not a DD, but it will be driven to and from the trails.
jayweb said:so - am I correct in assuming that crossover steering is not a good idea for a street driven vehicle? is it that unstable? mines not a DD, but it will be driven to and from the trails.
mudhog said:yes a did drive it around the block and it dose make the springs pop
I wanted to put some 0 rates in the front and move the axle forward and clear the tie rod. If I did that the drag link would come in contact with the top of the springs![]()
Now, I have heard ORD can make a 1/2 0 rate, but you lose the option of moving your axle forward.
My options now would be (for axle movement forward) ORD high clearance engine crossmember and a steering arm spacer under the knuckle![]()

MTBLAZER89 said:You could redrill the perch to move it forward about an inch, but then you will still run into the crossmember issue. I have 4" springs and a zero rate moved forward 1". I have a little rub mark on my draglink still with 5" of lift. i think it is just the axle relocation. Plus the downside to the zero rates as yu mentioned is the spacer under the steering arm. Sky does make the new tall arm, but they didn't have that when i bought my arm. i don't care for the spacer. It worries me. All that stuff is on a 10b/44 so it doesn't really apply to mudhog, but good info for the archives anyway![]()
Soon i won't have to worry bout the spacer![]()
Poison Spyder also sells the spacer for the x over arm, my bud just put one on his D44 for high steer...As far as I'm aware, with a 10blt anyways, you can run the swaybar as there isn't room for it pass by the drag link.chopped&bobbed77burb said:I don't think a panhard bar would hurt but I would only do it if you are not running a swaybar . It would seem to me that a swaybar would limit your side to side movement but would limit your flex and also make your ride alot stiffer .
