2013CGJKU
Member
I don't know if this is something that is done or not. I have a lot of time to think these days between being in the hospital and my horrendous commutes back and forth across this city.
So, I could in theory run 35s or 40s on the same lift. I would just have run some taller bump stops to keep the tires from smashing into the fenders. Therefore, up-travel on the Jeep is limited by tire size and once it has been established is a fixed gap as long as your tire size stays the same.
Now, one could cycle their axles and measure the gap from the top of the shock body to the bump stops on the shocks and take that number and either machine a spacer for the upper mount to move the shock shaft further down or fab a bracket for the lower mount to move the shock body further up. Therefore getting the absolute maximum travel out of their shocks that is possible.
I realize that there is a point with a regular spring/shock lift that too much down travel is a bad thing, unseating your springs.
But I feel like if I'm gonna drop all sorts of coin for a lift that claims a certain amount of travel, I should get as much of that travel as absolutely possible. If I am running a 4" lift on 35s that I am able to completely stuff, and then I get bigger tires and install the proper size of bump stops so I am properly stuffing my bigger tires there is now going to be potential down travel that I am sacrificing by having unused shock shaft in my up travel.
Am I nuts? Does this make sense? Does anyone do it?
Levi
2013 CG JKU 6-speed
So, I could in theory run 35s or 40s on the same lift. I would just have run some taller bump stops to keep the tires from smashing into the fenders. Therefore, up-travel on the Jeep is limited by tire size and once it has been established is a fixed gap as long as your tire size stays the same.
Now, one could cycle their axles and measure the gap from the top of the shock body to the bump stops on the shocks and take that number and either machine a spacer for the upper mount to move the shock shaft further down or fab a bracket for the lower mount to move the shock body further up. Therefore getting the absolute maximum travel out of their shocks that is possible.
I realize that there is a point with a regular spring/shock lift that too much down travel is a bad thing, unseating your springs.
But I feel like if I'm gonna drop all sorts of coin for a lift that claims a certain amount of travel, I should get as much of that travel as absolutely possible. If I am running a 4" lift on 35s that I am able to completely stuff, and then I get bigger tires and install the proper size of bump stops so I am properly stuffing my bigger tires there is now going to be potential down travel that I am sacrificing by having unused shock shaft in my up travel.
Am I nuts? Does this make sense? Does anyone do it?
Levi
2013 CG JKU 6-speed