bloc
SILVER Star
I don't dismiss Ben's knowledge, but his prerogative is to help customers focus on decisions that help make a sale.
Let's try this another way. I think you would agree added air pressure in tires are going to change the effective spring rate of the tire sidewall and forces translated into the chassis in a way that effects ride quality. Even with your king shocks, there will be a noticeable ride difference on account of that the compliance shortcoming.
Just as the spring rate of the suspension is fundamental to ride quality and will have effects.
The shock is equally important to manage and control the ride. But cannot improve on compliance that is not there.
Different faces of the same coin.
But, the springs we can actually install and not be riding the extension stops aren’t so much higher rate that they will ride significantly different. 20% less travel for a given force, in the case of a 600# front. For a mild build the 700#+ options will be far too much lift. If you have the weight to justify the 700s it balances out.
Compared to an adjustable shock that can be taken from “cloud” to “riding bump stop” with the twist of a knob.
I agree super high rate springs will bring in undesirable traits, unlike what OP asked for, but simply put I don’t think that is a risk with the options that are available given their other considerations.
With regard to compliance, in certain contexts yes it absolutely matters! If a 550# spring were available I’d be able to use slightly more travel in the front end for low-speed technical driving. With how light my setup is I can’t quite hit the bump stops when twisting it up. Filthy tried to find a 550 for me but couldn’t. A 500 would allow that travel, but require more preload than is ideal to hit the ride height that works with my rears. Thing is, compliance in this context has little to do with the noticeable effects when driving..