

Passenger side is almost done. I need to get some tear drop gussets cut like the one shown and add a little piece of 1"x.250 DOM to the upper shock mount so I can run a longer bolt/shank and reinforce it a little bit. Maybe weld it up too....
X2BajaF250 wrote:Philo,
Your fab works is looking good... as always!
Looking good Philo, just out of curiosity, what were you pulling travel wise with your other coil buckets?philofab wrote:Just measured travel on the drivers side.... 17". Looks like I will need to clearance the frame a little just behind the steering box at the top. The coil just barely kisses it at full shock extension. I have not drooped both sides yet to see if the u-joint gets angry. I have my up travel limited on both sides to save the A/C box, stop excessive negative camber on the passenger side, and give the ECM some clearance. I also found the nut for the upper left (driver) side radius arm bolt has come loose from the beams so next time I have it apart it will need to be welded back in.
Without the coil in there it did 16" with the 10" shock. However I figure with the coil it never saw both ends of travel.... I think it coil bound on compression and some of the droop was lost from the coil not extending all the way. I never ran bump stops or straps with the Camburg buckets. It was probably around 13-14" real world.tcm glx wrote:Looking good Philo, just out of curiosity, what were you pulling travel wise with your other coil buckets?
Sounds like a great plan... that's what I do... thank heavens I haven't had to use any of it yet, but it's always good to have the backup!philofab wrote:Started on the brake lines. 10" -3 hoses in four places. The rest will be hard line. I should be able to carry one 10" -3 hose and a -3 cap for spares. If I can't repair it with a new hose I can just cap the wheel and still have three brakes that work.
Looking really good Philo!philofab wrote:Built a cross bar... still need to cut it and install tube disconnects. Also picked up some brake stuff...
I'm hoping they are protected enough that I won't ever need them. The brake lines are less than $9 each so it won't be a big deal if I do. The solid line will run on the top of the radius arm, then go to another braided line to connect to the frame. Once it gets to the frame it will run inside the c-channel like factory. I haven't decided where to put the bias knob... I'm thinking on top of the frame rail so I can reach in the fender well to adjust it... I doubt I'll need to once it's set though.BajaF250 wrote:Sounds like a great plan... that's what I do... thank heavens I haven't had to use any of it yet, but it's always good to have the backup!
I haven't really messed with my bias once I set it... I really don't need to adjust it.philofab wrote:I'm hoping they are protected enough that I won't ever need them. The brake lines are less than $9 each so it won't be a big deal if I do. The solid line will run on the top of the radius arm, then go to another braided line to connect to the frame. Once it gets to the frame it will run inside the c-channel like factory. I haven't decided where to put the bias knob... I'm thinking on top of the frame rail so I can reach in the fender well to adjust it... I doubt I'll need to once it's set though.BajaF250 wrote:Sounds like a great plan... that's what I do... thank heavens I haven't had to use any of it yet, but it's always good to have the backup!