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sway bars

huggerk5

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Joined
Aug 16, 2001
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Location
Amarillo, Texas
I've never even considered sway bars until reading this sight. Can anyone give me some insight, pros, cons and trouble they had in the process?
 
It does get rid of the sway, making it more driveable in the freeway. specially down narrow roads. i travel a lot to mexico and some of roads are very narrow with no shoulders. some of my first driving experiences where not fun. i had to slow way down whenever i saw a BIG F truck coming the other way. swaybar made a hell of a difference in stablility. This all with a stock 72 4x4 blazer, 31x10.5, with rancho 5k shocks.

Others have not noticed much of a difference, specially with stiffer suspensions.

anyhow, i put one in from a second gen blazer(77blazer). Go for the 1-1/4" swaybar if you are going to do it. you will need the front leafspring caps that hold the swaybar. as for the mounts that mount on the frame. I had to reverse the brackets(left on right, right on left). With a lift you may want to go with some disconnects, that's one of my next "future" projects.

you may also get some imput from:
Steve Chin(fabed his swaybar mounts) and
Burt4x4(had put in an aftermarket swaybar kit)

later,

ARQ.

1-72 4x4 CST Blazer
2-71 4x4 CST Blazer
 
The front bar made my Blazer much more driveable on-road. I didn't disconnect it at Blazer-Fest and the Blazer seemed to weenie-wheel (I am too much or a rank amateur and coward to do any of the crazy stuff) just fine. It is much flatter cornering than it was and the adhesion limit is higher. It introduced a bit of understeer, so I am thinking of fabricating a rear bar to compliment the front one.
 
Let me know if you are interested in a sway bar, just yanked one off my 71.
 

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