On my list to buy, along with your windows
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On my list to buy, along with your windows
These are great products from a great guy. I don't have his disconnects (wish i did because my fabbed ones are hack jobs, but work) but i can assure you that being able to disconnect for trails and then connect them back for highway travel is a HUGE plus. I experienced that last year at hole in the rock.
What? Were they not long enough? I dont get it.Be VERY careful with this product. I sheered my brake line. Always check your brake lines afterward.
Be VERY careful with this product. I sheered my brake line. Always check your brake lines afterward.
Any chance you have these in stock currently? Let me know and ill place the order. Thanks!
Drove it down the classic washboard Colorado road and it shook the cotter pins out- both of them. The loose sway bar ripped the brake line out on the right. All of this on the way down Yankee Boy Basin with the kids onboard. Drive the whole way down without brake fluid.
not familiar with the product but if you are going to use a pin to secure the swaybay in place I'd be looking for something along this line.
McMaster-Carr
Forgot to mention it wiped out my drivers side ABS. So, total cost:
1. White knuckle drive in low gear and an emergency brake from Yankee Boy Basin to Ouray.
2. Brakeline, ABS, and master cylinder taken out.
All in all, not worth it to me to mess with this mod.
I agree with your conclusion that disconnecting the front sway bar is not worth the minimal added flex. However you have to expect issues will arise when you disconnect factory components. It is not really the fault of the mfg of the product.
Sure, but I think this particular mod needs to be highlighted in red for the uninitiated or folks who do not have prior experience. It is an assumption by many that everyone is aware of the risks here. But some of us have rigs where off roading and doing these kinds of mods comes with a bit of "first time" exposure. In my case, I had two kids onboard when the brakes went out just before the cliff-line on Camp Bird Road, heading down the mountain. I was able to coast the rig down the road in low gear and my emergency brake, but it was a potentially dangerous situation. And no one was coming in the opposite direction. Imagine if it had happened on one of the Moab runs. A seemingly simple, straightforward mod with potential deadly outcomes in the right setting.
My point is to emphasize caution and be specific about it before entrusting your life and your loved ones' lives when doing this mod.
Phil, with respect, this comment "properly to avoid any conflict but you were closed minded" is inappropriate.
I actually raised the issue with you several times, but you chose to fight me on this (and I was warned by others on MUD about your tendency to fight without listening). As a consumer, I and my kids were put at potential serious risk after doing the mod. And I was left with quite a bill for my trouble.
Either you acknowledge the issue, post the potential risks to your clients in an open and transparent manner, or wait until someone less reasonable than myself comes along and TRULY calls you out on the mat. I think it's fair to say we are all here to support the vendors and to be understanding given the nature of our hobby and inherent risks.
But you need to be transparent, forthright, and up front about the risks involved. I'm not going to fight you further on this Phil. Do the right thing here, for the sake of your clients.