rojizostang
Active Member
- First Name
- Rusty
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2019
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 41
- Reaction score
- 68
- Location
- San Antonio, Texas
- Vehicle(s)
- 2019 Ford Ranger xlt 4x4 sport, 2017 Ford Explorer limited, 2013 Ford F150 RCSB Roush tvs supercharged
I think a under axel flip would be too much drop for me. I guess you could raise it with shackles to your desired height?
Rather have replacement leaf springs to drop 1”-1.5” +-
I personally don't think that will work. I could be wrong but I think raising a truck with a previously installed flip kit (with shackles) will introduce even more of a pinion angle problem than what you will have with just the flip kit. I'm not a suspension expert but I've lowered just about every vehicle I've ever owned and still own the truck in post #218. It took extensive work to get all the angles to a point where there is no drive shaft vibration because of poor alignment. It would take some wedges with a serious amount of angle to correct this issue, imho.
Now on the other hand, if you're able to lower the truck and then adjust the ride height in the fashion you mentioned and somehow eliminate drive train vibration effectively....let me know because I would probably follow suit because I dislike the raised butt look also.
I was going to have my existing leaf springs de-arched, however doing this makes the springs longer, causing the shackles to lean backwards. That's not a problem in itself, however there is very little room where the shackles sit to accommodate them leaning back out of their current position. I think that a custom set of fabricated springs to lower the truck a couple of inches is the only practical answer. I talked to detroit/eaton spring about this, but they weren't interested. A de-arched shorter spring than the current stock spring seems to be the only plausible answer, but there's no one at least local to me that's interested or capable of doing something like that. Like I said, I spoke to Detroit spring, but they only work from specifications supplied by the manufacturers, and it will be several years before they expect to have any information on the new Ranger.
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