Re: Photog's Lifted 2009 Roadtrek 190V
I haven't measured how much droop is on it now that the new springs are in, but I know it is not a real small number, because I have to jack it up pretty high to keep the tire off the ground when I put it on the stands. I jack from the LCA lift point, so it stays compressed as I lift. I am assuming that I am fine because I am well within the factory ride height recommendations. I also haven't looked at the downtravel bumpstop to see if it allows any movement after contact, which messes up the numbers. Next time I lift it up, I will take a check of the droop.
As an update on ours. We just got back from 4 days of leaf looking in southern MN and WI, 3 campgrounds and 550 miles of varied roads, almost all paved, but some very rough. The combination of the new springs, air bags, Bilsteins, and alignment have made a significant difference in the way the Roadtrek goes down the road. Small bumps are less harsh, big bumps more controlled and single bounce, do to the Bilsteins, I would think. Big dips, either single or both wheels are much more controlled, and always bounces straight and true, which it did not do before, probably a combination of getting off the bumps in the front and the good alignment. It also responds to the steering faster, probably because of the better rear response and alignment. On a good road with light winds, it is literally a two finger drive and very car like. Bumps don't upset the direction at all, but are irritating! Wind effects are considerably lessened, and easier to correct for because of the faster steering response. It is about as easy to control in a 10-15 mph wind as it used to be without wind.
We are very pleased with the results to this point, as we were afraid the lift would make it handle worse, especially in the wind, but it got better.
Thanks for the link to the crawler folks sway bar setup. It is amazingly similar to what I was intending to build, but they have solved the major problem I was having in building a one-off. I could not figure an affordable way to attach the arms to bar, that would be tight enough to handle the big, two way loads. It looks like they use a compressed spline setup, which would work well, and if you are making a bunch of them like they do, is a good way to go. I will be seriously looking and measuring this winter to see if something from them could be squeezed into our setup with the airbags in place.
Photog said:Booster,
Have you ever measured the amount of remaining droop (down travel), left in your suspension, since the lift?
Basically measuring from a place on the wheel to the fender, then jack under the frame until the tire lifts off the ground, and measure again. The difference in the two numbers is the amount of droop from ride height.
I did some measuring on Saturday, and I get 3" of droop, before the upper ball joint reaches its limits.
Based on some of the design differences between the factory knuckle and my 4" lift knuckle, I think the factory knuckle would allow more than 4" of droop from standard ride height of the RT RV. On your RT, you have used up 2" of that droop, with the new spring lift. I believe this puts your suspension back to stock ride height (if I read the other forum correctly). I am wondering how much droop you have left, with the factory suspension components. I think there should be more than 2" left.
If there is only a total of 4" of droop, from RT ride height, then a typical spring-and-spacer lift of 4" would use up all the droop in our suspension system.
Any thoughts or measurements?
I haven't measured how much droop is on it now that the new springs are in, but I know it is not a real small number, because I have to jack it up pretty high to keep the tire off the ground when I put it on the stands. I jack from the LCA lift point, so it stays compressed as I lift. I am assuming that I am fine because I am well within the factory ride height recommendations. I also haven't looked at the downtravel bumpstop to see if it allows any movement after contact, which messes up the numbers. Next time I lift it up, I will take a check of the droop.
As an update on ours. We just got back from 4 days of leaf looking in southern MN and WI, 3 campgrounds and 550 miles of varied roads, almost all paved, but some very rough. The combination of the new springs, air bags, Bilsteins, and alignment have made a significant difference in the way the Roadtrek goes down the road. Small bumps are less harsh, big bumps more controlled and single bounce, do to the Bilsteins, I would think. Big dips, either single or both wheels are much more controlled, and always bounces straight and true, which it did not do before, probably a combination of getting off the bumps in the front and the good alignment. It also responds to the steering faster, probably because of the better rear response and alignment. On a good road with light winds, it is literally a two finger drive and very car like. Bumps don't upset the direction at all, but are irritating! Wind effects are considerably lessened, and easier to correct for because of the faster steering response. It is about as easy to control in a 10-15 mph wind as it used to be without wind.
We are very pleased with the results to this point, as we were afraid the lift would make it handle worse, especially in the wind, but it got better.
Thanks for the link to the crawler folks sway bar setup. It is amazingly similar to what I was intending to build, but they have solved the major problem I was having in building a one-off. I could not figure an affordable way to attach the arms to bar, that would be tight enough to handle the big, two way loads. It looks like they use a compressed spline setup, which would work well, and if you are making a bunch of them like they do, is a good way to go. I will be seriously looking and measuring this winter to see if something from them could be squeezed into our setup with the airbags in place.