RE: RE: Re: Tuned Up -- and a question.

From: Ronald Wong (ron-wong@cox.net)
Date: Fri Nov 01 2002 - 09:17:33 EST


Might want to check your alignment as well. Of course, I changed my shocks
to Tokico's 10K miles ago and they work great....and the Tokico's were free
so can't beat the price. I do have Scorpion Zeroes on the truck (and it is
time for a new set) but I can't vouch for how well they work in the snow.
We can't get any rain here, let alone snow. Anyway, I think the Scorpions
work quite a bit better than the Badyears. SEMIHEMI01 just got a new set of
Scorpions too, but alas, he doesn't have any snow either, however, he's
gotta helluva lot more rain than I do.

Ron
00 PB SLT QC 4X2 5.9 46RE 3.92 LSD
For modifications see my DML Profile (URL follows)
http://www.twistedbits.net/WWWProfile/dakota/Kw9pV1EkFeOYY

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-dakota-truck@bent.twistedbits.net
[mailto:owner-dakota-truck@bent.twistedbits.net]On Behalf Of Terry
Schwartz
Sent: Friday, November 01, 2002 5:37 AM
To: dakota-truck-moderator@bent.twistedbits.net
Subject: Re: DML: RE: Re: Tuned Up -- and a question.

Hi Paul,

No, 42k on the stock shocks... someone else had the Ranchos. The truck
doesn't oscillate when I bounce it, but I just get the feel that the shocks
are looser or sloppier than earlier on. More body roll, etc.

Another problem I'm having -- tire balance. I took the truck into one of the
chains for balancing and rotation, on the original P255/65R15 Eagle LS's.
There had been a bad vibration at freeway speeds. The first round of
balancing did nothing, so I went back, they re-did it, much better. Now a
month later, the vibration is back, not as bad, but back. I wonder if this
is shock related as well?

Maybe I should just bite the bullet, new shocks and tires all around, and be
done with it? Damn those Eagles are expensive... Has anyone tried the
Pirelli Scorpion Zeros in the snow?

Terry.
'00 4.7L SLT ext cab
pretty much stock!

<Tubamirbls@aol.com> wrote in message news:109.1b0cf262.2af09808@aol.com...
>
> Hi Terry
> So you now have about 40k mi on your Ranchos? The test of any
shock's
> effectiveness is of course dampening; how quickly does it stop the truck
from
> boing-boing up and down after a dip or similar road surface irregularity.
If
> the vehicle straightens itself out after one rebound you don't need to
> replace your Ranchos yet.
> In my experience the rear shocks on vehicles like trucks where you
have
> semi eliptical leaf springs on a solid axle tend to have a longer
effective
> life than on the front of the same vehicle when front independent
suspension
> is present. If you decide you must replace your Ranchos now, then before
> ordering all 4, unfasten one rear shock from its bottom mount, and by
hand,
> force the shock up to near its fully retracted position then pull it
> vigorously down to its fully extended position. If you feel you had to
work
> pretty hard in both these motions, especially the going up to collapse it,
> then you are getting almost as much shock action as a new one is going to
> give you.
>
> Paul Sahlin



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Fri Feb 06 2004 - 11:47:24 EST