ctechbob
Well-Known Member
Snarkyness sure is a great way to get your point across.Just drove my truck. It fell apart. Bolts everywhere. Warrantee gone.
Do not install these bumpstops. They are a part made for Toyotas.
This is just about the only thing you've said that is correct. Yep, you'll have more travel before the axle crashes into the stop. Not necessarily a great thing if you're using shocks that are meant to have an active bumpstop in play.Kidding.
Been playing with it a lot and haven’t found any downsides. More useable leaf spring before contact is made.
More snark directed in my direction, cool.Loaded about 10 cases of beer in the bed and hit some hefty bumps faster than I would have liked to see if I would “end up in the weeds”. Nope.
You mean 'compliant', either way.These are softer and more compliant than stock. Don’t get me wrong, you feel when you hit the stop, as you should. However, the material is way more compliment yet supportive. You don’t get a harsh hit like the stock stops that have you say, “ahhh my kidney.”
Missed this the first go-round
No you damn well should not 'feel it'. Do you think real desert racers (Think Robbie Gordon/Ivan Stewart and the like) are bouncing off bump stops? No way in hell. They have huge nitrogen-charged shocks for a reason and that reason is to damp the motion BEFORE it gets to a hard stop. They're not 'feeling their bump stops like they should'. Why? Because IT UPSETS THE TRUCK.Don’t get me wrong, you feel when you hit the stop, as you should.
This is EXACTLY why the longer/softer/more progressive stops are used these days. Engineers have found that you can run less initial spring rate for comfort, and then slowly increase that rate under load to provide the shocks time to damp the motion. This is EXACTLY why they work so well on Toyota's. Toyota is STARTING with a stiffer stop and by adding these 'magic stops' they're going to a softer/progressive stop.
Further.
For the last time. You cannot have something (A single material bump stop as these all are) both be softer and more supportive. The material is either a higher durometer, or it is softer. If it is higher, then the impact will be more than the OEM stops. If it is softer, you'll crash through the stop and you'll have metal-on-metal. It simply can't be any other way. I see no mention of them being anything other than a single durometer material. They're not some super multi-layer stuff.
Are you? Are you sure?After I drank all the beer, the ride was even better. Kidding again.
No, you have 1-2" more before the stop is contacted. The shock is probably very close to bottoming because it was designed to work with the factory stops. Someone is going to take your advice with a different set of shocks and absolutely wreck the internals because they didn't check the travel before they bolted on the 'miracle stops' you keep pimping.Unloaded the bed so I just had my shell. Drove even faster through some small whoops. Continuous cycle of the suspension and continuous contact with the bumps, no bucking of the rear end and certainly smoother. Better yet, I have about 1.5-2 more inches before my shock bottoms. Go me.
No comment.Now I’m clearly no profession, I just tune, rebuild, and sale suspension for other people’s money.
Well, you're absolutely correct there.I will say that these would be not good for towing with a high tongue weight. You would have a pretty significant amount of squat and your leaf springs may shed some tears. Would it work? Yep. Would it be comfortable? Probably not.
Uhh, they're not. Timbrens are a rubber material. The Ford OEM Raptor ones are Poly, just like the regular ones. But you knew that because people pay you to know that, right? Also, I'm quite sure Ford can build their own bumpstops and don't need to subcontract those.Something else to note: Raptor bump stops also work great on our setups. I was torn between those and the superbumps. Although, the Raptor bump stops (I believe they are timbren)
Already coveredThese are the bumps sold with a very prestigious set of leaf springs. I wanted a bit more contact and a slower ramp up, so I went with the superbumps.
No, you're just trying to convince people to use a product in an application for which it isn't designed, or suited.I’ll keep proving people wrong with updates on the terrible performance of these crappy Toyota bumpstops.
Indeed‘Merica
Sponsored
Last edited:



