If I can hand build these ,Dont ya think i could make a suspension kit work?
Frankie, I want to address this first. I am not doubting anyones capabilities. I was postings facts and measurements. There is a big difference between a total custom design and working within the limits of the 80 series stock setup. Not that you can not do it, but there are no free lunches.
Have you ever wheeled a loaded 80 with limited uptravel and big tires, with huge bumpstops to stop the tires from rubbing? These trucks are not buggies or rock crawlers. They need the up travel. Otherwiser you are on the bumpstops all the time. Not fun.
I can ask the same question. If we have the skillset at work to make a 80 do this, don't you think we can design a suspension?
This is not a pissing match. Just a thread about making the most of a 80 suspension.
frankies off road said:
Q... I just don't see how you will maximize all the travel if you have to bumpstop it to avoid overcompressing the shock.
F.O.R ANSWER,,,,,,We are maxamizing all we can with what we have left after the BUMP STOPS.
So what size bumpstop are you running on the truck that you are showing lifted on the forklift? Also are the rear tires touching or not?
Q...... factory oem or OME?
F.O.R ANSWER,,,,,old man emu
Ok, so you made it droop out a lot, with limited up travel. What happens when you drive this truck fast over bumpy roads? Will the uptravel be enough to not hit the bumpstops?
Q..... At what point does that happen? Only when the shock mount is twisted so much that the pin will touch the side of the mount. The OME bushings allow for plenty of movement..
F.O.R ANSWER,,,,,, It hapend pretty quick from a resistance stand point, We need to make the front flow as free as posible,because the rear travels much easier than the front.every little bit helps front to rear sus BALANCE.
I would venture to say the resistance the front control arms to twist is way more than the resistance on the shock. The front shocks are hardly at an angle at the top, yes they have a little angle at the bottom. But is that resistance worth going to a shock converter and using a shock with a bushing that is way smaller than OME? What about the durability of the smaller bushing on high speed travel on dirt roads? The bushing size is one of the great features of OME.
Q....This might be the case on forklift/ ramp testing but on the trail you can still force the suspension to go to full droop with the swaybar on.
F.O.R ANSWER,,,,,Yes thats correct but at the sacrafice of suspension balance, what amount ? but if it does not matter then why lift them at all..
The inbalance in a 80 suspension is due to the different designs of the links. There are tons of threads on here where people have tried, experimented, tested etc to get the front end to move. The only real fix is three or four link front.
Q.....will agree with you that there are probably better shocks out there, but at what price. For the price, the OME shocks have pretty good features.
F.O.R ANSWER.... I will let the users make that decision..
True, the customers can decide, but they should be given all the facts. The OME is already a 10" /11" travel shock. Installing a longer shock with shock adapters will make it droop out more. That is not the question.
I am questioning why does fitting this stock allow you to run 35's with 2.5" of lift better than a regular OME shock fitted with 2.5" of lift? That is what you are saying. Just because you are increasing droop does not mean the tires fit better.
When you run taller lifts, you move the axle articulation away from the frame. The wheelwell is still the same size, so compressing the tire up into the wheelwell causes the same rubbing issues as before but the plane around which the artciculation happens is further away from the body. What does this mean? We get more up travel which is what these trucks need.
You can get away with very little up travel in buggies etc, but not on these trucks.
I am not attacking you, just sharing knowledge that we have gained over the years.