lumbee1
Native American
I made a adjustable rear panhard for $31. I didn't need an adjustable panhard on the front.
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Dont forget Blackhawk adjustable panhards. They are part (optional) of the Slinky kits. Factory bushes and double jam nuts. One more option to add to the list. Production versions are black powdercoat.
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That image that was in my earlier post is not my truck and does not have the axle moved. Here's a shot of my truck with the axle moved. It looks much closer in this photo than it actually is.Adam, did you have any axle clearance issues with this bar when you moved the axle forward 1.25"? (specifically your diff armor plate there...)
When your suspension is stuffed and the tires are rubbing, what needs to happen with the panhard rod length to ease the rubbing? I would just do that in very small increments until problem solved.So if I do decide to do this would I want to lengthen or shorten the front bar? In my minds eye it seems I would want to make it longer but I really don't know.
Other than removing the coils and stuffing the front axle to the stops how else can I determine how much to adjust the front bar?
On topic w/ OP, I have a 4" lift + want to avoid rear axle side shift when towing at freeway speeds and bumps.
eimkeith PCK brackets such a nice kit to level, then went the step further to check out ebay adjustables ~$140/set. What turned up for me YMMV:
Front OEM orig 11 lbs Yellow Aftermarket 11 lbs
Rear OEM orig 6 lbs Yellow Aftermarket 9 lbs
Pleasant surprise front bushings had 48706-60030 marked on them, those run ~$30ea at my Toyota Parts counter. No idea if genuine:
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