The_Lobbster
Well-Known Member
Well, I do. Guess I'm a minorityAlso no body cares about Johnny law
Well, I do. Guess I'm a minorityAlso no body cares about Johnny law
Well, I do. Guess I'm a minority
As long as the suspension replacing it meets or exceeds the strength of the OEM equipment, it is not. I think some 1/4 wall DOM would pass that easily.If you dig deep enough its probably illegal to ditch the factory style suspension to begin with....
I'm assuming R.E. is Rubicon Express? I'm trying to find pictures of their arms to give me an idea. Are they the ones that the upper link turns in towards the middle of the axle instead of directly above the bottom mount?
Thanks for the info! I've been doing some digging. Just to verify, is this type of arm setup that you are suggesting? Wristed arms seem to be the go to for many Samurai guys. Even the Rocky Road Outfitters coil kit runs a wristed setup, but except that none of the joints are adjustable at all.Correct, rubicon express. Like @xj_nate said, you can look at a lot of XJ or TJ applications for inspiration. Not knowing the nuances of samurai's, you might have a hard time packaging that style of radius arm in there.
Regarding the sway bar, don't samurai's come with a factory sway bar? If so, can you make some disconnects for it?
Essentially all an anti-rock or similar is, is a sway bar with a light spring rate.
I've ran anti-rocks in off road rigs, and they can help in some situations, but they are a trade-off for on road driving. For an occasional off roader, I would personally run a standard sway bar with a disconnect. Especially on something as short and narrow as a samurai.
Very small, bushings are small and I don't believe you can even buy them anymore, unless somebody sells a universal one that will fit. With a 4" or so lift too, the bar will need to either be dropped in the front, or some sort of crazy extensions made. I mean, I do have one, and I can definitely try it out to see if it'll fit or not.Also, curious about what makes the sammy sway bar junk? I have no experience with them. Are they just considered junk off road, or is there something about them that's a bad design?
My current early bronco was not equipped with a factory sway bar. I added a hellwig and really like how it has helped it behave on the road.
Very small, bushings are small and I don't believe you can even buy them anymore, unless somebody sells a universal one that will fit. With a 4" or so lift too, the bar will need to either be dropped in the front, or some sort of crazy extensions made. I mean, I do have one, and I can definitely try it out to see if it'll fit or not.
As far as the rover/cruiser arms, that looks like a great option. One thing I would personally desire, would be the ability to adjust them somehow though, so I could change caster angle if I wanted. My reasoning being, if I wanted to run an 10" coil or so, but then decided I wanted some more height, I could swap in a 12" or 14" with ease, and then simply readjust the caster to account for the extra height. I will definitely look into it more though. Wonder if I could run some sort of cam bolt to allow for that. I do like the idea a lot of having it hung down below to make more room for the coil pads though.
Alternatively, I could just set it up with the axle brackets installed on bottom and bolted into the arms connected at the frame, set my height, measure for coils, rotate the axle as needed to choose my caster, call it good, and never touch the suspension height again. Which is probably my best option I suppose.
Frame and axle side use the same bushings, which are lower control arm bushings for a mid-90's Dodge truck. They are the same outside dimensions as a Jeep TJ/XJ/ etc. bushing, so they pressed into Teraflex forged housings.Wow, those are some beefy looking units! What kind of joints are you using on the frame side there?