@bjowett thank you for responding. I caught this as I was jumping in the truck.
to add (superficially as the tech side is handled above) the Koni Raids are predominantly used in commercial/NGO applications (similar to the Land Cruiser). Koni makes enough money from these orders to really not need to market or offer them to consumers (similar to the Land Cruiser). I’ve experienced these shocks in work trucks and cannot recall a failure. They’re beefcake and they work extremely well especially when worked hard and under load. They’re not designed for stock trucks or road use which was alluded to above.
I can’t really make a fair comparison to TD, but knowing that the TD offers only compression compared to the Raid’s off the shelf rebound adjustment that itself speaks volumes. Simply put, do you want to have adjustment on how quick the suspension activates or how quick it returns. In application rebound gives the user the ability to adjust how fast the suspension will get buried during constant activation. Generally progressive-rate springs with compensate for lack of compression adjustment in the shock.
last note, these are 100% rebuildable as mentioned above. So are a lot of other high-end shocks. But the intervals are much longer and you don’t have to send them back to Koni to do it like most other others require. Honestly, all things considered, I’d say these arein the same league as the Slee res shocks made for the 100 (which are built/valved by ADS specifically for the 100). Take that for what it’s worth and know I haven’t driven the Slee shocks.It’s purely a paper comparison made with pragmatic reflection to the maintenance I’m able and willing to perform.
frankly I’m a set and forget type of guy. I’ll fiddle with my stuff untill it’s right and it better perform until I’m ready to rebuild. I expect the konis to perform as expected and flawlessly for 100k for my use.