Kold', I'm guessing that if you measure the arch at ride height on your BDS springs, you're going to find it's about 4" or so, maybe a squeeze more.
Exactly. Just under 5".
Compressing a stadard aftermarket spring 4" is about all they can take. It may be good for a bit more but that's a matter that takes some closer calculation. So it is probably a matter of over compression again. Just because none of the lift manufacturers tells you about a bumpstop spacer doesn't mean the spring is designed to run without one. Often they count on the capacity of the spring being the suspension's limit so basically you can't put enough load on it to hurt the spring. 20 years ago this was a good strategy.
Good points... with my 6" Pro-Comp springs I was never the least bit concerned that I would lose more than an inch or two of lift, ever, no matter what I put on the front of the truck. Negative arch? Yeah, right. Right now I have my stops built to stop the spring when it is completely flat. On the passenger side, I have had the spring flat on the bumpstop and it has never lost any ride height. To me, negative arch is when the spring center moves above the eye to eye centerline. Is this over-compression? For my springs, yes. I think it is misleading to the average person when you tell them that negative arch doesn't hurt your springs. Would an 8" superlift spring be fine after it sees negative arch? I think we are over-generalizing the problem here... too many application specific variables to take into account to say neg arch is good/bad. So... I still believe that negative arch due to over compression on most 4" plus lift springs is bad for them. Ah, bullsheet. I guess we are both right.