AutoCraft Aus
Araco Master
- Joined
- May 20, 2008
- Threads
- 15
- Messages
- 918
- Location
- Central Victoria, desert region.
- Website
- 4xoaus.com.au
I cant comment on what you had fitted but looks like you always went 2.0s looking at the pricing, so really re enforces what Im saying about stepping up to 2.5s for an OVERLANDING or heavy rig. Our custom versions are limited lifetime warranty, so cost per mile would of been , and you wouldnt of had the poor ride of twin tube set ups. If you had customs made, then ensuring the design of the custom shock was right within the build requirement of the vehicle parameters is another consideration.
So 95,000 miles with a one off cost on good 2.5s with warranty would of come in better than the twin tubes cost per mile, plus the added benefits. Our service life fits easily into that 100,000 miles as a general rule, from our testing, and improvements.
The other choices on your list are what I call "well marketed" shocks, but in the real world they just are generic, like most twin tubes with sticker engineering. I would never run any of those on a std truck, let alone a heavy truck, as you found out.
This point was well driven home on our recent South West Adventure trip, where every afternoon the OME and Rancho fitted vehicles would lose shock control completely and be going full suspension travel to the point of pulling rear wheels off the ground like pogo sticks on the trails. Not conducive to having the shocks like being a slide hammer, or the truck itself putting up with this, when "overlanding" around the weights you mention. Also has impact on the bushes etc as well when this happens.
So based on your numbers its far better to spend good money once which is what we always say, than bad money many times to learn the same thing over and over and expect a different result.
So 95,000 miles with a one off cost on good 2.5s with warranty would of come in better than the twin tubes cost per mile, plus the added benefits. Our service life fits easily into that 100,000 miles as a general rule, from our testing, and improvements.
The other choices on your list are what I call "well marketed" shocks, but in the real world they just are generic, like most twin tubes with sticker engineering. I would never run any of those on a std truck, let alone a heavy truck, as you found out.
This point was well driven home on our recent South West Adventure trip, where every afternoon the OME and Rancho fitted vehicles would lose shock control completely and be going full suspension travel to the point of pulling rear wheels off the ground like pogo sticks on the trails. Not conducive to having the shocks like being a slide hammer, or the truck itself putting up with this, when "overlanding" around the weights you mention. Also has impact on the bushes etc as well when this happens.
So based on your numbers its far better to spend good money once which is what we always say, than bad money many times to learn the same thing over and over and expect a different result.