BDKW1 wrote:Usually when shafts bend it's for something else failing or poor setup. If everything is set-up correctly, 3/4" is plenty large enough for anything. 5/8" is good enough for 75% of the stuff out there.
To revisit shaft bending a bit more... the bending comes from some kind of bind or side loading. The shock is at its weakest at full extension and the longer the travel the more seceptable it is to bending. This is where the rod guide, tube, piston tolerances, and bearings come into play. Attached is a photo of what I am talking about and call the "bearing support length" measured from the end of the wear band (which is a bearing) to the end of the rod guide or wherever the support ends at the seal head.
Outside of the shock I have seen bending caused by a number of influences. Coil bind, rubber bushing bind (under articulation), or binding contact between the rod end spring hat or other part of the shock against the chassis.
For rubber mount shocks like the 5100 or 5150 I reccomend changing the rod side rubber bushing to a heim end from the 7100 series shock to reduce the possibility of shaft bending bushing bind.