hey, if you decide you want someone to take those terra-grapplers off your hands you can send em out here to colorado
just playing- ride looks great!
hey, if you decide you want someone to take those terra-grapplers off your hands you can send em out here to colorado
just playing- ride looks great!
"Do Not Seek Praise. Seek Criticism."
"If You Can't Solve A Problem, It's Because You're Playing By The Rules."
"The Perosn Who Doesn't Make Mistakes Is Unlikely To Make Anything."
-Paul Arden
I will pray for your CV's if you pray for mine LOL.
I have the OME 912's, 1" spring spacers, 1.5" drop brackets, 33" tires and I can't keep a CV around for more than 6 months.I think I am going to end up dropping the diff another 1". The ground clearance up front is still WAY more than enough when you consider your rear axle has to go over whatever your front did.
2001 Ironman Daily Driver... 3.5" suspension lift (OME912 springs and 1" spring spacer), ball joint flip, 1.5" front diff. drop, 33"x12.5 TrXus MT, 16x10 Eagle Alloy rims, Interceptor, PV muffler, K&N air filter, Alpine Supercharger, Bilstein shocks, and some trimming.
2000 Ironman Project LS-1 VX... very slow progress but someday....... ohhhhh someday......
Hmmm, I must be lucky. I cranked the torsion bar as far as I could without reindexing the bolts. I have the 919s in the rear. Been 1 year, I have wheeled it and mudded it, original CVs and boots as far as I can tell. No problems so far!!!! (Fingers crossed)
I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them.
Thomas Jefferson
To answer some questions or confusion earlier in this thread, you don't have to crank the piss out of your torsion bars to lift your VX. You can re-index the bars so they don't get overstressed from being cranked on. You simply uncrank the bars with the VX supported on jackstands, counting the turns it takes until they are unloaded. Then you remove the bolts on the brackets holding the bars to the A-arms. This is a good time to index mark both the side of the brackets and torsion bars for later so you have a reference. You then pull the torsion bars to the rear and allow the A-arms to come down to the position you want them to sit at for your desired tires/ride height. Remove the brackets from the bars and count how many splines you have to rotate them in order to line up again with the holes on the A-arms. You reinstall everything and let the VX down from the stands. It will likely squat onto the tires, or the tires will be close to the wheel well, this is when you start cranking for your desired springiness and stiffness. Another thing to remember while you're doing all this is that the thinner (lower profile) bumpstops you put in, the lower your A-arms can droop, and as a result, the higher your VX can be lifted. The bumpstops for the front are under the upper A-arm. Doing this indexing mod will place less stress on your torsion bars making them last longer, retain their springiness longer and keep your ride height correct longer. It will also reduce the shock loads from suspension cycling offroad so you don't break them while wheeling.
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable man persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on me.
I've got a question on your theory Bro...
Isn't the same amount of torsional force required to lift the same load?
Maybe I'm looking at this from the wrong perspective, but it seems to me that no matter where the torsion bar is indexed, you're gonna have to apply the same amount of torsional force (twist) to lift the weight.
Granted, you will have more threads to work with on the adjusters after re-indexing, but that's not changing the force required to lift the same amount of weight.
Just thinkin' out loud, not tryin' to pick on ya......
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Yes, the required force(tension) in this case placed on the bars is the same. The only difference is that when people lift their vx's they usually just crank the bars harder which as we all know puts more stress on them. They are still supporting the same weight, they are just lifting it higher in this case by putting more of a "load" on the bars. When you re-index, it's like putting the load on your bars back to stock. The bars are supporting the same weight again, but they aren't under the same tension as if you just added a bunch of cranks to them, it's closer to or equal to stock tension. Hope this clears up the reasons for re-indexing.