I used six if I remember correctly, been awhile since I needed it. Never had a problem with them outside of being made of aluminum ( easy to strip the threads).I have some of those
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I used six if I remember correctly, been awhile since I needed it. Never had a problem with them outside of being made of aluminum ( easy to strip the threads).I have some of those
No she rides in the back. Wow you have a large group.I used the alum power tank roll bar mounts. Is Elsie riding shotgun or dog bed in the back ?
You may not see us Tues/Wed as my run count has dropped to 1 and we may go in Tahoe side.
My rear upper mounts tie into my cage . Really the reason for the angle is packaging . I did not want to cut into the tub . If you are running just coils then you want to keep them vertical . I do not remember off the top of my head ? but when a shock is at a angle you lose a percentage of its damping ability . Most of the builds i have seen they are running 2.0 coilovers. i run 2.5 so thats a little different as well . I do want to get my fronts revalved because i originally had triple bipass shocks to run with it also but i just could not get them to fit . So my fronts are a bit soft . . The blue 40 i am building had Coils at one point and it was really flexy but the coils will fall out so you have to run limit straps . I can say my 40 rides really nice and i never expected to drive it on the street but it drives straight and 1 finger on the wheel . I have a buddy with another 40 also on 40s but he has a LS in his and last summer we were kinda racing i guess you could call it for some turtles . and were doing over 80 and it drove fine . ( my 40 would pull away from his ) and that was with my crappy sniper . now i know it will pull his .So I have a question about your build if I may; I saw pictures on the previous page of how your rear shock was at an angle - I’m studying and trying to learn in preparation of linking my 4 door build, and I was toying with the idea of leaning the shock but keeping the spring vertical over the rear axle.
I did go back clear through this thread but didn’t see a detailed process of how the rear coilovers were mounted, maybe I missed it.
Is there an advantage to angling a coilover vs using a separate shock and spring?
What are the consequences of leaning the whole thing, as far as ride, travel, and engineering the link suspension?
Your truck looks awesome, BTW!
I had to notch my frame in addition to cutting into the tub to vertically position my 2.0 coilovers. They wouldn’t clear the frame had I not done this. You may have better luck with a shorter coil and separate shock setup. I like Jeff’s setup.So I have a question about your build if I may; I saw pictures on the previous page of how your rear shock was at an angle - I’m studying and trying to learn in preparation of linking my 4 door build, and I was toying with the idea of leaning the shock but keeping the spring vertical over the rear axle.
I did go back clear through this thread but didn’t see a detailed process of how the rear coilovers were mounted, maybe I missed it.
Is there an advantage to angling a coilover vs using a separate shock and spring?
What are the consequences of leaning the whole thing, as far as ride, travel, and engineering the link suspension?
Your truck looks awesome, BTW!
This is kinda why I was asking. I’d like to not have to cut into that aqualu tub, I’d like to put the jump seats in it. But I’m close to being able to doing a vertical coilover, if I compromise on travel a bit.I had to notch my frame in addition to cutting into the tub to vertically position my 2.0 coilovers. They wouldn’t clear the frame had I not done this. You may have better luck with a shorter coil and separate shock setup. I like Jeff’s setup.
That looks amazing, very innovative.Here are a few pics. So you can see from the top the plate it part of my cage then from the bottom it ties to my frame
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Angle will help with stability to some degree. It can help with some body roll as well. A lot of that comes down to link geometry through. I have nearly 30° of rear coilover angle, but it handles very well without a ton of body roll.So I have a question about your build if I may; I saw pictures on the previous page of how your rear shock was at an angle - I’m studying and trying to learn in preparation of linking my 4 door build, and I was toying with the idea of leaning the shock but keeping the spring vertical over the rear axle.
I did go back clear through this thread but didn’t see a detailed process of how the rear coilovers were mounted, maybe I missed it.
Is there an advantage to angling a coilover vs using a separate shock and spring?
What are the consequences of leaning the whole thing, as far as ride, travel, and engineering the link suspension?
Your truck looks awesome, BTW!
Thanks.Angle will help with stability to some degree. It can help with some body roll as well. A lot of that comes down to link geometry through. I have nearly 30° of rear coilover angle, but it handles very well without a ton of body roll.
An increased angle will change shock valving characteristics to some degree, but its usually not super noticable inless you are on a super high perfoming setup.
Really appreciate your build thread, Got mired down in the cage section, haven’t even found the suspension part yet but I will!!Angle will help with stability to some degree. It can help with some body roll as well. A lot of that comes down to link geometry through. I have nearly 30° of rear coilover angle, but it handles very well without a ton of body roll.
An increased angle will change shock valving characteristics to some degree, but its usually not super noticable inless you are on a super high perfoming setup.
Yea, I shouldn’t have treated like a magazine and started at the back.IIRC start at page 16 ish
Really appreciate your build thread, Got mired down in the cage section, haven’t even found the suspension part yet but I will!!
Your welds are freaking inspirational.