My rear swaybar has been in 2 pieces for the past 18 months with no adverse affects. If there is any differences in handling it is very little.
Billy Oliver
15xIronman
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Strictly speaking, the momentum is the same either way, but it may carry a bit farther to each side. If you had a tall vehicle and a lot of weight up on the roof I could see a change in the COG, otherwise not so much, not enough to matter anyway.
Out in Moab I disconnect my sway bars for the entire week...drive winding roads like hwy 313 to Canyonlands NP...you get used to the body roll. Aired down tires are a bigger menace to highway cornering than disconnected sway bars.
95 Trooper with a buncha stuff nobody here cares about...
I never felt the VX handled dangerously with either sway bar off and I don't ever see myself putting the rear bar back on. I just noticed the front had a lot of under steer that persuaded me to leave it on full time.
Swede... I figured you weren't running a rear sway bar in Moab. We we're the only 2 Zus that had issues with unseating our coil springs. Too much flex![]()
Yep, I have disconnects for both sway bars...that was the first time I had lost a coil on this Trooper; I didn't know the Ranchos that came with it were long enough to allow that to happen. I now have OME shocks that are a bit shorter and so should retain the coils from here on out.
The defense rests its case.
Could be, my turning radius seems to be unaffected. I'll be putting on bigger tires with a wider stance wheel soon so I'll see how much of an effect it has. I'll let you know.
Yes, the wider stance did affect my turning radius understandably.
Drastically so??
Vixer Fixer
No, but enough that it is noticeable. I have a corner I turn every day that is approx 110 degrees. The wheel input I always used puts me a bit nto the oncoming lane. Not a big deal, I just have to crank the wheel a bit more. Not thrilled but I can live with it.