Who all are running pucks up front for pulling and what thickness ? I ran a 2" puck all last season and plan on buying a stick of cold rolled 2" X 3" and doing some experimenting next season on how big I can go .
Yeah, if thats the case, just make them adjustable instead of having to run different pieces of pipe.
If you are placing them where stock bumpstops are, you are only controlling compression distance, not rebound distance. If you place a limiter on the upper control arm you can keep hitch height more constant, but there might be adverse handling effects
If you are placing them where stock bumpstops are, you are only controlling compression distance, not rebound distance. If you place a limiter on the upper control arm you can keep hitch height more constant, but there might be adverse handling effects
got any pics of what you guys are talking about exactly? Do you run you bars all the way down and use the pucks to hold the front end up? Are the front shafts still able to level out?
By adjusting compression distance, you also adjust rebound height, which inturn helps maintain hitch height.
It also helps a ton trying to turn with 35s and stock height.
Yes, the truck will just lift to the same position, but if it starts out higher, it lifts less, and you lose less hitch height. We used 1" threaded rod (most race shops have it) and welded a nut to the top of the old stops, so now the rod screws down through the old mount and hits the a arm.
So is there an advantage of the adjustable stops on the top a arm over a bump stop on the bottom other than adjustability ?
My plan is that I will have from 1 1/2" all the way up to 3" in the truck so that on the rougher tracks i can go less on the front blocks to let the suspension work .
Another advantage I have right now is in my area there is only 2 other trucks running the pucks or any front suspension stop . So if I keep running the pucks instead of the adjustable less people realize what I am doing .