I love your rig Marc. I wish my old yj was that nice.
Yes id tell the op to stand up the shackle more. What your saying is telling me your fighting the consequences of flat shackles. I have a toyota i built in 07 i run old school skyjacker 4 " lift springs on and set the angle straight up and down on the front pack. Ive never bent or broke a front spring to this day. Ive beat it like it owed me money for years and years.. i think those are the only thing i havnt broke on it lol.. also... id stand your shackles up a little.. see what results you jave....@POR So you'd correct mine to at LEAST where I drew the red line?
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You'd advise the OP to move his shackle back to the furthest back bolt hole?
(I'm not trying to pick a e-fight or anything, just wanting to learn some actual math/theory. I've been pretty happy with the rear suspension for a long time. I attributed my rear main leaf fatigue to a 4:1 transfer case and heavy 14 bolt running 38-40" tires. Just thought it'd be par for the course. If the angle could be changed/corrected and the leaf springs would last more than 2000-2500 miles {granted those aren't "normal" miles for a trailered rig} I'd be interested to know)
All these reasons is why you should stand that shackle up. I doubt youll need extra leafs.The angle is about 40 degrees. That's all I read on the Cherokee forums was to get close to 45. I have all of my tools and a 33in spare in the back too. I don't wheel it super hard and most of its use is trail riding and camping. It pulls the occasional trailer to the dump. After seeing how flat it got, I do want to add another leaf or two. Thanks for the input guys.
If you do change it to be so vertical-ish, make sure you do an anti-inversion shackle, Shackles pinned up against the frame are no fun, and definitely contribute to bent leaves.
Yes id tell the op to stand up the shackle more. What your saying is telling me your fighting the consequences of flat shackles. I have a toyota i built in 07 i run old school skyjacker 4 " lift springs on and set the angle straight up and down on the front pack. Ive never bent or broke a front spring to this day. Ive beat it like it owed me money for years and years.. i think those are the only thing i havnt broke on it lol.. also... id stand your shackles up a little.. see what results you jave....
Ok so im not driving now lol so i looked at your pic better.. where you drew the red line is where i'd put my shackle angle at. On toyota front springs the shackle is in the back, not like jeeps lol.. but even on jeeps i stick to my formula.I did have that exact problem on my front springs. (that's why I went to coils) I had a more vertical shackle angle. Bent springs at the first ledge (as you come down off the slickrock part and climb that first 2-3' ledge to get to the sandyish area).
If I did go through all the work of extending the frame and such, I'm not sure I'd go past about 65* or so? The rear has the shackle back so I probably wouldn't be banging it into things while climbing unless I'm in reverse. Are shackles fwd on or rear on a Toyota?