You're still doing the no spring deal right? Just to show how much shocks matter.
The best I could do is three different tunes on my fully compressed shocks. But I'm not spending the money on a shim kit anytime soon and most certainly not for this!I do kinda expect you to use three different shocks with no springs, just to keep things even.
I just might do this, just to prove it to myself. You were a good Jeeper on that auto/manual thread and it's the least I can do. I'm lazy, it'll take weeks.If it makes you do the other more important thing.![]()
Ya, I can see that. On this thread it is definitely the first thing I can understand.certainly not for this
Four at least.I have no words.
Springs can make a small change, I think I even said fringe or something like that. I just dislike when people say they have zero effect.
So... without any shocks installed, you don't think you would feel a soft spring compress further or hit a bumpstop harder than a stiff spring? Using real life, off the shelf, rear coils, follow this example. Take an OME 2996 spring, rated at 250lbs and compare it to an OME 941 rated at 140lbs. Both springs were designed to provide approximately 2" of lift. But I understand there will be differences in lift due to the weight they can support. So to be fair, lets adjust bump stops to ensure any height difference is adjusted for. Now lets go for a ride. Do you think you will able to tell which set of springs you are riding on when you hit a big dip in the road. Do you think both sets of coils would impact your bump stops with the same force?
I really don't have anything more to add here. I have changed coils while keeping the same shocks in 2 different vehicles. The first time I went from a dual rate coil to a linear rate coil. The second time I went from a linear rate coil to a dual rate coil. Both times I could feel a difference in how the coils behaved. Its a matter of the vehicles weight/spring rate. But then again, I can tell the difference between driving my LJ with a full tank of gas or an empty tank of gas. So maybe I am just more sensitive to body motion. I don't know. |
And that Epstein actually killed himself.this thread reminds me that the earth is flat.
You're still talking about springs like they matter, the simply don't. Do you simply ignore what I say? Don't understand English, or what?
I think everyone also agrees that a custom tuner can tune shocks to match any set of coils. That is not the argument.
So much of this sounds familiar to things I argued many years ago.
So... without any shocks installed, you don't think you would feel a soft spring compress further or hit a bumpstop harder than a stiff spring? Using real life, off the shelf, rear coils, follow this example. Take an OME 2996 spring, rated at 250lbs and compare it to an OME 941 rated at 140lbs. Both springs were designed to provide approximately 2" of lift. But I understand there will be differences in lift due to the weight they can support. So to be fair, lets adjust bump stops to ensure any height difference is adjusted for. Now lets go for a ride. Do you think you will able to tell which set of springs you are riding on when you hit a big dip in the road. Do you think both sets of coils would impact your bump stops with the same force?
I realize there are other factors at play in a suspension system. I'm not saying that shocks don't matter. NOBODY is saying that shocks don't matter. Everyone agrees that shocks unquestionably make the biggest difference. I think everyone also agrees that a custom tuner can tune shocks to match any set of coils. That is not the argument. The argument is whether or not springs make any perceivable difference. Look at the springs in the example above. I don't think there would be much difficulty in telling the difference between a set of springs that requires 2000lbs to compress vs a set of springs that requires 1120lbs to compress. That is a noticeable difference.
Lets look at it mathematically. Lets say we have 8" of travel 4 up and 4 down. In order to fully compress that 2996 you will require 2000lbs of force (250lbs x 4" x 2 springs = 2000lbs) . On the other hand that 941 will only require 1120lbs of force (140lbs x 4" x 2 shocks = 1120lbs). When you hit that dip in the road, which coil do you think will bottom out first or hit the hardest. The set of coils that requires 2000lbs to fully compress or the set of coils that requires 1120lbs to compress?
NOTE: (We could use the same example with shocks by utilizing shock extensions to ensure our up/down travel is the same)
I really don't have anything more to add here. I have changed coils while keeping the same shocks in 2 different vehicles. The first time I went from a dual rate coil to a linear rate coil. The second time I went from a linear rate coil to a dual rate coil. Both times I could feel a difference in how the coils behaved. Its a matter of the vehicles weight/spring rate. But then again, I can tell the difference between driving my LJ with a full tank of gas or an empty tank of gas. So maybe I am just more sensitive to body motion. I don't know.
I completely agree, they are insignificant compared to a good shock tune. I've never said otherwise. I've only said differences exist.....Those differences you may or may not be perceiving are so insignificant compared to what a good shock tune accomplishes.
The differences we may or may not have perceived are so insignificant that they simply don't matter and are not worth any effort.I completely agree, they are insignificant compared to a good shock tune. I've never said otherwise. I've only said differences exist.
As stated above, there is a disconnect here somewhere. Whether it is in my understanding or in my ability to verbalize what I'm trying to say, I don't know.
Thanks for hearing me out.
or me just a yr or 2 ago. it's hard to negate things you think you know...I argued many years ago
or me just a yr or 2 ago. it's hard to negate things you think you know...
Blaine for sure, you and a few others have had the experience of incremental changes that brings about an understanding of how each individual piece and often it's placement effects the sys as a whole. not all of us have.
You are still talking about springs.I completely agree, they are insignificant compared to a good shock tune. I've never said otherwise. I've only said differences exist.
As stated above, there is a disconnect here somewhere. Whether it is in my understanding or in my ability to verbalize what I'm trying to say, I don't know.
Thanks for hearing me out.