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Fox Life!!! Anything Related to Fox Suspension

Discussion in 'Suspension' started by ThaiChillyTaco, Feb 25, 2018.

  1. Dec 3, 2018 at 5:30 PM
    #1021
    DaMaDo

    DaMaDo Well-Known Member

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    Mike from Accutune told me to stick with 600# springs with 160 pounds of bumper/winch/lights. I'm going to keep it at a 2" lift, so 1" higher than stock.
     
  2. Dec 3, 2018 at 5:52 PM
    #1022
    Sub_Par

    Sub_Par Well-Known Member

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    The stock springs may be too short to get that lift. I’m switching to a 14”x600lb with a SSO front bumper and winch. I can preload it more before coil bind and still have a smoother ride.
     
  3. Dec 4, 2018 at 7:00 AM
    #1023
    fxrman

    fxrman Well-Known Member

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    OVT 1.03 Tacoma bed matt Husky floor liners Insain fab aluminum bumper with Baja design s8 30" light bar DB custums grill with Baja design s8 30" light bar
    3" for sec. gen, 2" for 3rd. Gen, so at 2" how is that 1" over stock..??
    My truck is a 3rd. Gen and they told me with an aluminum bumper with lights and sliders I could get 2 1/2" with stock 600lb. Springs. My question is that too high for my CV's ..??
     
  4. Dec 4, 2018 at 7:09 AM
    #1024
    desertjunkie760

    desertjunkie760 @DesertJunkie760 (IG)

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    Check My Sig.
    No, people run 3” all of the time.
     
  5. Dec 4, 2018 at 11:25 AM
    #1025
    DaMaDo

    DaMaDo Well-Known Member

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    From what I understand, the 3rd gen is already lifted an inch stock.
     
  6. Dec 4, 2018 at 11:30 AM
    #1026
    fxrman

    fxrman Well-Known Member

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    Exactly....so these lifts provide 3" for the 2nd. Gen and 2" for 3rd gen...
    I'm supposed to be set at 2.5" but kinda worried about CV angles.
    I know people run 3" on 3rd gens but I don't know how bad there reliability and longevity suffers.
     
  7. Dec 4, 2018 at 1:58 PM
    #1027
    *TRD*

    *TRD* Well-Known Member

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    Sorry, just saw this. If you just need a little more lift the 14" long 600 is a good way to go. If you need more lift, or plan on adding more weight than a 650 may be necessary.
     
    RangerComa[QUOTED] likes this.
  8. Dec 9, 2018 at 3:55 PM
    #1028
    The1youluv2hate

    The1youluv2hate Well-Known Member

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    oem pro grill 17” pro rep wheels Fox dsc shocks
    D7A70BE5-7224-426B-8467-477A92089018.jpg

    Here’s a updated pic
     
  9. Dec 10, 2018 at 11:39 AM
    #1029
    Hookedup

    Hookedup Well-Known Member

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    Just received my Fox 2.5 IFPs from accutune and im going to put them on a 19’ DCSB OR.. I’m wondering if I can clear a 285/75/R17 with a CMC and 2.5” of lift??.. I’ve heard you need 2.75” to clear. Which makes me wonder if the 13” 600lb coils are sufficient without too much preload and sacrificing ride quality.. is a 14” 600lb better suited??
     
  10. Dec 10, 2018 at 11:43 AM
    #1030
    iwashmycar

    iwashmycar a lot

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    33's | 3" | skids | rails | dent | CB | lights | dingus
    I know the lowly 2.0's dont even hardly count, but for $670 I had to. Love them so far. Had to do my adjustments with the "no spring compressor" method and it worked out really well.

    Just hanging in place after adjusting height. For reference that might help others...These came preset to 2" supposedly. I tuned the passenger side up 5 threads...and the driver up 7. Definitely seems like a full 3" now. (even though its on a FJC)

    [​IMG]

    Wrapped in some neoprene covers. They were a little long at 18" so I tucked the bottoms under and zip-tied em.

    [​IMG]
     
    Hookedup and 14Tacos4me like this.
  11. Dec 10, 2018 at 11:57 AM
    #1031
    DaMaDo

    DaMaDo Well-Known Member

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    If you go off road, you should cut/trim in order to be able to clear without any lift.
     
  12. Dec 10, 2018 at 12:10 PM
    #1032
    Hookedup

    Hookedup Well-Known Member

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    Your f@!*en with me right??
    It’s 33.8” x 11.3” tire!! no way it’ll clear.. I think i might have to go with a 285/70/r17 with 2.5” to be safe. And i still might rub.. i just don’t know if i have the right coil.
     
  13. Dec 10, 2018 at 12:11 PM
    #1033
    desertjunkie760

    desertjunkie760 @DesertJunkie760 (IG)

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    Are they ext. travel? A longer spring will not provide more lift than a shorter, it’ll just provide less preload.

    So no.
     
  14. Dec 10, 2018 at 12:16 PM
    #1034
    Hookedup

    Hookedup Well-Known Member

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    Yes extended travel. Just thinking that slightly longer=less preload=better ride at 2.5”-2.75” of lift?? Or am i doing the math wrong? Lol
     
  15. Dec 10, 2018 at 12:25 PM
    #1035
    desertjunkie760

    desertjunkie760 @DesertJunkie760 (IG)

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    Same spring rate per inch.
     
  16. Dec 10, 2018 at 12:31 PM
    #1036
    Hookedup

    Hookedup Well-Known Member

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    Ok i get that 600lb vs 600lb. But doesn’t less preload make for a better ride?? And wouldn’t a longer spring technically give you less preload at the same height?? Sorry for my redundancies but I’m new to this and I’d like to learn..

    Thanks
     
  17. Dec 10, 2018 at 1:08 PM
    #1037
    desertjunkie760

    desertjunkie760 @DesertJunkie760 (IG)

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    There are plenty of threads in TW that cover this topic and I would best advise you taking some time to read up on them to better understand the subject. I am by no means an expert on the matter but I am learning.

    I also have a terrible tendency to use the incorrect terminology when discussing "preload." You do not have "more or less preload" when you change the spring length, you only change the location of the preload ring. Technically speaking, you have the same amount of preload with a 13" spring as a 14" spring to achieve the same amount of ride height, assuming the spring rates are the same.

    Read some of the Accutune Tech articles and maybe that will help explain better.
    http://accutuneoffroad.com/articles/spring-preload-matters/

    Most springs are linear, so if you were to "rate" a spring, you would find that for every inch, the load multiplies. 13" 600in/lbs spring at 1" is 600lbs and is 1200lbs at 2". Same is true for a 14" spring, therefore the preload to achieve the desired height never changes.

    We get confused because so many people, myself included for awhile, believe that preload is directly related to the ring position on the body and not the compressed length of the spring.
     
    Last edited: Dec 10, 2018
  18. Dec 10, 2018 at 5:48 PM
    #1038
    Hookedup

    Hookedup Well-Known Member

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    Thanks after reading this, & the preceding posts on this thread.. it sounds like i need 650lb coils (not 14”) to achieve 2.5” without too much preload.. but to be accurate, I’ll call Ryan at accutune tomorrow... again.. he’s been good with me so far.. i just don’t want to bind these 600lb coils trying to get the height i want..
     
  19. Dec 11, 2018 at 9:00 AM
    #1039
    *TRD*

    *TRD* Well-Known Member

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    This whole preload thing is really hard to think about, especially on Tacoma's because of their space constraints. @desertjunkie760 got it right.

    Ride Height = (spring compression due to vehicle weight) + preload

    Any spring that is the same spring rate will compress the same amount and give you the same ride height at the same preload.
    Higher rate springs give you less preload, but a stiffer ride.
    Softer springs give you a smoother ride.

    Tacoma's are over sprung (front and rear). So we want the softest springs possible on the coilovers.
    We've had good success with the standard 13" long, 600 lb/in spring on 2nd and 3rd gen Tacoma's with light upgrades (sliders & skids) and reasonable lift heights.
    For lighter upgrades or taller lift heights (2.5" +) we recommend a 14" long, 600 lb/in spring.
    For people with steel bumper, sliders, steel skids, & winch we recommend a 650 (usually)
    And for fully loaded Tacomas with all that plus RTT, bed rack, heavy gear load, & heavy passenger load then we start getting into 700 lb/in springs.
     
  20. Dec 11, 2018 at 9:10 AM
    #1040
    desertjunkie760

    desertjunkie760 @DesertJunkie760 (IG)

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    Question, why do you say 14”x600 spring for 2.5”+ lift over a 13” at the same spring rate? What does that do for the user if the spring rates are the same?
     
    *TRD*[QUOTED] likes this.

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