On the road in my LX again.
We're traveling from Colorado to North Carolina, Alabama and back to Colorado, mostly highway with few national forest visits for back county camping.
My cruiser is a 99 LX on bilstein 5160s dissent and slee steel bumpers, sliders roof rack, drawer "system" and a winch not to mention all the junk a woman needs for two weeks, along with the dog and myself.
Last time I weighed with no recovery gear, tools or jacks spare parts ect the car came in at 6800lbs.
So we pushed through from Colorado loaded to the gills to Nashville nonstop arriving at 5am. Camped out and made the short trip into the Ashville area of NC.
Spent the next few days visiting family before loading up and heading south.
I'd noticed the rear of the car on this leg of the trip to be a little under dampened and once we got off pavement in the Chattahoochee national forest I realized what was happening. A lot of noise coupled with some bounce I got under the car to investigate. Road was muddy shock was definitely loose or broken I wasn't sure, our pre-planned forest service road was closed no cell reception and no camping was available without permit from rec.gov( i loathe that site). I tired to remove the shock quickly but was unsuccessful with the car sitting on the ground. Needless to say I was a little annoyed at this point.
We continued back towards the highway to find another forest road, by now the banging bothered me enough to get the hi-lift off the roof and remove the shock.
After a quick chat with state patrol I had the shock off and car back on the road.
We bounced our way back up another mountain we're we found a nice place to stop. Next morning we moved onto Alabama where I was able to remove the rest of the shock and investigate the cause of failure.
Apparently these shocks are threaded together, I was curious how these were attached when I installed them now I know didn't even see any thread locker..
Looks to be that the shock was pulled apart and didn't unscrew.
So I finally get to the title of this post, is anyone here using limit straps or have you guys broken any rear shocks? Closer examination looks like the threads are all pushed over and somewhat flat on the tips.
I'm going to weld this one together and get some limit straps for the rear axle but am curious if anyone else has dealt with this.
I did run into a another LX that broke two rear shocks in the same place that were welded together and couldn't really make sense of why, im suspecting now it was due to being pulled apart.
We're traveling from Colorado to North Carolina, Alabama and back to Colorado, mostly highway with few national forest visits for back county camping.
My cruiser is a 99 LX on bilstein 5160s dissent and slee steel bumpers, sliders roof rack, drawer "system" and a winch not to mention all the junk a woman needs for two weeks, along with the dog and myself.
Last time I weighed with no recovery gear, tools or jacks spare parts ect the car came in at 6800lbs.
So we pushed through from Colorado loaded to the gills to Nashville nonstop arriving at 5am. Camped out and made the short trip into the Ashville area of NC.
Spent the next few days visiting family before loading up and heading south.
I'd noticed the rear of the car on this leg of the trip to be a little under dampened and once we got off pavement in the Chattahoochee national forest I realized what was happening. A lot of noise coupled with some bounce I got under the car to investigate. Road was muddy shock was definitely loose or broken I wasn't sure, our pre-planned forest service road was closed no cell reception and no camping was available without permit from rec.gov( i loathe that site). I tired to remove the shock quickly but was unsuccessful with the car sitting on the ground. Needless to say I was a little annoyed at this point.
We continued back towards the highway to find another forest road, by now the banging bothered me enough to get the hi-lift off the roof and remove the shock.
After a quick chat with state patrol I had the shock off and car back on the road.
We bounced our way back up another mountain we're we found a nice place to stop. Next morning we moved onto Alabama where I was able to remove the rest of the shock and investigate the cause of failure.
Apparently these shocks are threaded together, I was curious how these were attached when I installed them now I know didn't even see any thread locker..
Looks to be that the shock was pulled apart and didn't unscrew.
So I finally get to the title of this post, is anyone here using limit straps or have you guys broken any rear shocks? Closer examination looks like the threads are all pushed over and somewhat flat on the tips.
I'm going to weld this one together and get some limit straps for the rear axle but am curious if anyone else has dealt with this.
I did run into a another LX that broke two rear shocks in the same place that were welded together and couldn't really make sense of why, im suspecting now it was due to being pulled apart.