I was just laughing how we had moved to a links talk.


I kept on track as best I could.
It wasn't a links vs leaf springs debate to start. So I tried to share my experiences.
I have yet to have a driveshaft failure (other than the stock double cardan joint needing rebuilt), and I have ran the piss out of my rig in the sand almost every chance I got the last 2 years straight. And ran it decently hard, but not as crazy for the 2 years prior.
4 years with the ORD springs now, and the front shaft setup, and zero issues.
CYCLE YOUR SPRINGS, SETUP YOUR BUMPS, and GREASE YOUR SHIT.
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What slip are you using? Does it have a bellows on it? Pics?I just showed that mine uses 6" And I got an 8" slip to be safe.
What slip are you using? Does it have a bellows on it? Pics?
Ahhhh! I hate this thread! I wanted a (you definantly need this, from this manufacturer, no questions asked) answer. Not only that, it needed to be affordable!
I was being semi sarcastic but... Not.No such thing as bolt on for this stuff man.
If you want bolt on, buy a razor.
We can get you close, but at the end of the day, every rig is slightly different.
Yes, I'm grinding the stops, but not completely. Technically they are there to prevent a drive-shaft pole-vault event if the front U-joint breaks, but touching the ground at ride height may be higher than touching the yoke at full droop in which case you don't have much choice. With a 4" lift or so, the stock CV stops are practically touching at ride height. If you droop and ride the stops, bad things will happen.


I'm pretty sure I read this whole thread so sorry if this is a repeat. What's the verdict on greasable vs non greasable U-joints? I can pick up some heavy duty Spicers at Speedway on my way home.
I beat the dog piss out of my Blazer, my driveshafts don't have crazy slip.
Martin
Do you jump it lots?