I put new Bilstein shocks on my 2006 Roadtrek 210P 10 years ago at 30k miles. I also raised the van 2-inches with stiffer front springs and rear airbags at the same time. Also replaced tie rods, idler and Pitman arm at 50k miles.
So now, 10 years and at 130k miles, the van still seems to ride fine but one nagging question: how do I know the shocks are still good? Unless there is a drastic shock failure, how do you tell that the shock has lost capability? The old bounce test doesn't really apply anymore from what I can tell from internet search, though if the shock is totally shock the bounce test might find that. Some sites suggest a road test with a number of checks: fast accel, rapid stop, ride over rough road, quick swerve... Nothing seems out of the ordinary but I still wonder.
One option is to just get new shocks and be happy I got 100k out of the old ones. But would hate to spend the $$ and find out the old ones were fine.
Has anyone changed out their Bilsteins and found new shocks were much better? Any other thoughts?
So now, 10 years and at 130k miles, the van still seems to ride fine but one nagging question: how do I know the shocks are still good? Unless there is a drastic shock failure, how do you tell that the shock has lost capability? The old bounce test doesn't really apply anymore from what I can tell from internet search, though if the shock is totally shock the bounce test might find that. Some sites suggest a road test with a number of checks: fast accel, rapid stop, ride over rough road, quick swerve... Nothing seems out of the ordinary but I still wonder.
One option is to just get new shocks and be happy I got 100k out of the old ones. But would hate to spend the $$ and find out the old ones were fine.
Has anyone changed out their Bilsteins and found new shocks were much better? Any other thoughts?