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Actual Moderator with a Tacoma...But Definitely Not a Build Thread

Discussion in '2nd Gen. Builds (2005-2015)' started by jberry813, Oct 10, 2016.

  1. Feb 27, 2017 at 8:44 AM
    #1161
    Arcticelf

    Arcticelf Well-Known Member

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    Gotcha. Bump/droop is the limits for the leaf pack, which straps and bumps must respect. Based on that shock length is set and hub articulation is derived.

    Thank you sir.
     
  2. Feb 27, 2017 at 9:29 AM
    #1162
    T4RFTMFW

    T4RFTMFW Well-Known Member

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    Gimme a break, man. Do you read any of this or just type it out?

    :rolleyes:
     
  3. Feb 27, 2017 at 9:47 AM
    #1163
    cmack

    cmack Well-Known Member

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    here for the gang bang
     
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  4. Feb 27, 2017 at 9:48 AM
    #1164
    ArcherTaco

    ArcherTaco Well-Known Member

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  5. Feb 27, 2017 at 10:52 AM
    #1165
    jAndyMendo

    jAndyMendo i eat samiches

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    bummer on those 4x shackles. even with better bushings I wonder if that bend is a good idea over time. Was hoping these would be a nice addition to the new hangers that may be coming... I do like the lube port, but that is one of three.
     
  6. Feb 27, 2017 at 10:57 AM
    #1166
    ARCHIVE

    ARCHIVE Well-Known Member Vendor

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    Eric
    Orchard Park, NY (Buffalo)
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    2.5" Fox relocation * Hammer hanger * Archive MD springs
    You have a point on the bypasses with a Tacoma at stock height and with springs over axle, there is only 3" of bump travel on a stock 2nd/3rd gen, which is extremely poor.
    You would need atleast 5-6" of bump travel for a bypass to be practical. So spring under or a higher lift is needed with bypasses.
    My kit has a lower axle mount that can rotate down pretty far to allow a gain in bump travel for spring under conversion, about 7" with Deaver U539/540's 1" SUA springs and stock hanger, putting the shock piston in the middle of the travel.
    A lot of Tacoma owners are using 12" travel and most of that is droop, 14" would allow same droop and add more bump travel.
     
  7. Feb 27, 2017 at 11:12 AM
    #1167
    jberry813

    jberry813 [OP] Professional Fluffer Moderator

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    Jason
    Lake Tahoe
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    ...too much shit to list.
    Ummm...no. Bypasses are helpful for any amount of shock travel when you are snob on shock tuning like me. And for the record, I have 2.5" of hydro bump travel and 2.5" of free bump travel the way it sits now...and plan to bump another 1/2" higher than I'm set now. For those that are poor at math, that equates to 5.0" of bump travel now and 5.5" of bump travel when I do my hoops...which fits into your "at least."


    Seriously...what the fuck is with my build? Why does everyone and their sister think they should just come in here and tell me about some other fucking product or route other than the route I'm going? I'm not asking for feedback. I'm not soliciting opinions. Seriously...fuck off. Pedal your opinions and product elsewhere.
     
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  8. Feb 27, 2017 at 11:14 AM
    #1168
    bski22

    bski22 Shaka Zulu \000/

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  9. Feb 27, 2017 at 11:14 AM
    #1169
    ChadsPride

    ChadsPride Tacoma Owner & Enthusiast

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    :ohsnap:


    You should SAS it​
     
  10. Feb 27, 2017 at 11:18 AM
    #1170
    Fernando

    Fernando Hammerdown

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    Double sub'd for SAS
     
  11. Feb 27, 2017 at 11:25 AM
    #1171
    Arcticelf

    Arcticelf Well-Known Member

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    An empty comment box with a blinking cursor is irresistible?
     
  12. Feb 27, 2017 at 1:15 PM
    #1172
    ARCHIVE

    ARCHIVE Well-Known Member Vendor

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    2.5" Fox relocation * Hammer hanger * Archive MD springs
    I was agreeing with you. Sorry, I was tagged, I did not try to pedal anything, just responding to your claim that 14" is pointless. Maybe it will become the new standard, we'll see. Leaving now
     
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  13. Feb 27, 2017 at 1:17 PM
    #1173
    ChadsPride

    ChadsPride Tacoma Owner & Enthusiast

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    Dont go..... :pout:
     
  14. Feb 27, 2017 at 1:18 PM
    #1174
    jberry813

    jberry813 [OP] Professional Fluffer Moderator

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    ...too much shit to list.
    Yes yes...14" with a spring under kit. Perhaps you would like to see my first gen I built with 17" of travel with 16" stroke shocks and SUA. But then again...that wouldn't be applicable. Apples and oranges...twatwaffle.
     
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  15. Feb 27, 2017 at 1:33 PM
    #1175
    la0d0g

    la0d0g Its 4 o’clock somewhere

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    Eww, you made me think of blue waffle.
     
  16. Feb 27, 2017 at 1:34 PM
    #1176
    ChadsPride

    ChadsPride Tacoma Owner & Enthusiast

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    So hungry rn
     
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  17. Feb 27, 2017 at 3:14 PM
    #1177
    Crom

    Crom Super-Deluxe Member

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    My apologies Jason. I posted mobile, I think the auto correct got me on your name, or it was just too early in the morning for me. :oops:

    Thanks for clarifying on how your measuring, I'm going to point out that you didn't answer my question on what your calling your measurement but that's okay.

    It's important to ask because as you know, suspension topic can be very complex and sharing a common vocabulary is important to try and reduce or eliminate confusion.

    When I wrote that my wheel travel was 13.75", it was true. However I neglected to state that it was done under forced articulation. My bad! :oops: I have no formal training or education in anything automotive related, just a passionate hobby similar to yourself, I think. But I've gone through great lengths and thousands of hours to try and scientifically understand the construction and configuration of my truck and how changes to things like suspension would translate to performance / comfort, etc.

    After you cautioned me in the overland thread, which I do appreciate, I took your direction and read the links, which led to questions, and then I do what I always do and did some research because I am interested.

    Please let me share a little of what I've learned and offer a comment or two down below. I hope this is interesting.

    The only written reference I could find to an established method to measure wheel travel was in Billavista's most excellent coilover Bible. It is arguably one of the best resources on the net for gaining knowledge about suspensions. My friend Ken, directed me there a while ago when we were discussing leverage theory / and coil springs on the front a-arms.

    Anyways, in there Bill speaks to different modes of travel:
    • Ride travel,
    • flex travel,
    • roll travel,
    He draws an important distinction between wheel travel, and suspension travel.

    I'll quote some of it here:
    And his writings on wheel travel:
    This piece of information was vital to my understanding of the topic. When measuring actual wheel travel, I think it's critical to specify which mode of travel is being measured. And by definition the wheels, or at the very least one wheel should be attached.

    Now for my comment and thoughts, which I hope you can appreciate.

    I will illustrate my thoughts through a problem/resolution I recently experienced.

    When a spring is drooped all the way out, the wheel, axle, and all the attached unsprung weight will pull on the spring, helping stretch it out some. For reference my tire/wheel is like 84 lb when it was new. I'm guessing yours are probably 100lbs+ :) So what I did was I drooped out my suspension with force (flex), and I noted the shackle angle and measured. The angle was like only 16° forward (problem!). I loosened the shackle nut and watched the shackle rotate forward, and noted the new shackle angle of 30° forward. I got about 1.25" more travel this way. I was a victim of self-inflicted over torquing the shackle nut on one side of my truck. Understanding this phenomenon is what reignited my desire to banish the rubber shackle bushing. I was halfway through a stalled out shackle refurbish project, I so picked that back up...

    At this point I then wondered how a heavier tire/wheel combo would affect the spring, so I applied 200lb downward pressure on the tire. I think I got 6° more forward on the shackle and maybe .5" to 1" more travel at the wheel. I removed the extra 200lb from the wheel, the springs rebounded slightly, and shackle returned to 30° forward. Before I forget to mention it, I had pulled the shock out entirely for this exercise.

    And for the sake of completeness, when doing all my measuring, I used the center wheel hub, to fender lip. As we both know, there are some real problems using fender lip for a reference point. For example, the fender lip is not a flat surface to begin with so whatever reference point is chosen on the lip, it must remain constant. When I did this, I instantly saw the problem, so to keep myself honest, I used a flat metal ruler with a bubble level attached and chose to inboard the ruler 0.25"

    So what does this all mean?

    Just my opinion, I think wheel travel is relative to each vehicle. I think it should mean actual measured wheel travel with wheels attached, and with travel mode listed with measurements.

    For me it was "flex travel", and yours in "ride travel" although I'm not sure you measured with wheels attached. :notsure:

    So what does this mean with respect to the fabricators and vendors in the market place? There is a lot of truck parts out there for sale with travel numbers attached. What does it mean?

    Well I checked around some. I talked to Tim at DMZ fab, Total Chaos, and Scott at Deaver. I wanted to learn more about SUA which is why I chose them. First of all complements; they are are extremely knowledgeable and very helpful. They are eager to help with truck building, and I am grateful. In a short time, I learned quite a bit. But to the point, based on my conversations, they all seem to use the terms "wheel travel" and "suspension travel" interchangeably. When I specifically asked how to measure wheel travel. None of them said anything about wheels actually being attached. TC and DMZ instructed me to do it essentially the same way as yourself. That is to say, lift up back end of truck from frame with both sides drooped, then both sides compressed, measure frame to bump, or bump to u-bolt plate depending on how truck is setup. All of it was in reference to measuring in "ride mode." Deaver gave me several options for measuring as long as the reference point was good when measuring bump to droop.

    Sorry for the long post. :cookiemonster: I hope I didn't write anything too wrong, that happens with long posts sometimes. I just thought you would find this interesting. I realize I know only a little.

    Thank you Jason, for inspiration to lean and grow knowledge. ;)
    Now for those product images. :bananadead:

    I know you didn't put them all there, shenanigans and all, that's the thing with build threads, you have no control of what people put in them. :D

    So here is my contribution:

    Swimsuit: https://www.amazon.com/Canserin-Women-Push-up-Bandage-Swimsuit/dp/B01K4TT2A0/
     
    Last edited: Feb 27, 2017
  18. Feb 27, 2017 at 3:14 PM
    #1178
    Mademan925

    Mademan925 Senor Taco

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    enough to go over stuff
    Just here to copy you....
     
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  19. Feb 27, 2017 at 3:34 PM
    #1179
    scocar

    scocar hypotenoper

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    You forgot semen recipes in the title.

    Just trying to help.
     
  20. Feb 27, 2017 at 3:36 PM
    #1180
    bayareataco

    bayareataco Well-Known Member

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