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Hi optimus, I run 2.0" in the rear and 2.5" in the front; I put bumpstops on the rear axle just becouse the wheels go to close to the shock and I'm afraid that in heavy compression they could hit them. In the front I don't have any bumpstop and the shocks work fine.
Francesco
this is easy- if you bottom your shocks out, it will ruin them, sooner or later. unless your tubing your rig out then surely your going to have to limit your upward travel to keep your tires from eating up your fenders or slaming the hydraulics into the frame etc.
ps. where are you on the build now? how's it going? where's the porn at man?
Hi optimus, I run 2.0" in the rear and 2.5" in the front; I put bumpstops on the rear axle just becouse the wheels go to close to the shock and I'm afraid that in heavy compression they could hit them. In the front I don't have any bumpstop and the shocks work fine.
Francesco
this is easy- if you bottom your shocks out, it will ruin them, sooner or later. unless your tubing your rig out then surely your going to have to limit your upward travel to keep your tires from eating up your fenders or slaming the hydraulics into the frame etc.
ps. where are you on the build now? how's it going? where's the porn at man?
do you bottom the shocks out at all?
My understanding is that with AIRshocks, this isn't a problem and that the last couple inches of travel become SO stiff that they function as bumpstops.
My understanding is that with AIRshocks, this isn't a problem and that the last couple inches of travel become SO stiff that they function as bumpstops.
I have not personally run airshocks, so I cannot attest as to whether or not this is true, but it's what I've been told repeatedly from those who do have them.
well your right. you got my curiousity up with this so i called tech support at poly perf. he said that out of the box, the shocks will bottom out. but, you actually can tune your airshocks to act pretty much the same as a air bumpstop in the last couple of inches of travel. but they still STRongly recommend at least installing a ureuthane bumper on the shaft as a insurance policy against a super hard hit or a air or oil leak.
oil volume will be the determent in whether the shock can bottom or not. You can use them as bumpstops but it would be wise to have a fail safe as well.
Optimus, how much do you think your rig is going to weigh when finished?
8 airshocks!?!? Why? For what that will cost you can just run coilovers. If you're really worried about weight, why not just run the 2.5 airshocks.
having twin 2.0" airshox on each side of the front will be just like using a 4.0" air shok.![]()