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five link for a gq
five link for a gq
hi i would like 2 now if the five link is worth the $$dollers and will it work well 4 rock crawling or is there a better set up then the five link .its for a gq and some photos of the five link a gq would be nice to look at and whos useing one now and what length shocks should you run with a five link .
ive got a 6inc tuff dog set up will the springs and shocks ive got suit the five link or will i have buy ones 2 suit it.
ive got a 6inc tuff dog set up will the springs and shocks ive got suit the five link or will i have buy ones 2 suit it.
Last edited by cun7s on Sun Jun 15, 2008 11:40 am, edited 1 time in total.
dont do it
i wouldn't do the 5 link, as it will make your truck more able to role over.
i would try the X link set up.
good luck
i would try the X link set up.
good luck
Re: dont do it
have you ever run one? have you driven one? have you built the setup or bought a bolt on kit? if you add all this info, it will give the bloke a more definitive answer,dazza30875 wrote:i wouldn't do the 5 link, as it will make your truck more able to role over.
i would try the X link set up.
good luck
NOW:
I just recently put a 5 link in the front of my GQ MWB ute, now this truck is a comp truck, and rearly sees road use, and by rarly i mean 20ks in the last year max,
now we damabged the chassis where the original arms mount through, so we turfed them and built a 5 link front end for it, its not a bolt on kits, its all custom buil in the shed, no cad drawings or anything major,
i dont actually have pics at the moment, but our setup uses 680mm long lowers, 450mm long uppers, lower arms are about 24 drgrees angle, uppers are at 6 degrees or there abouts, i know they asre not paralell, but hey its was a trial, on the first run it prefprmed really well, we could not fualt it, this setup also pushed the front diff forward about 2" which is great in a comp ute, but our ppanhard bar does touch the pumpkin on full compression, but owell, that will change,
I think ours drives better now upto 60km/h on the unbalanced 38" swampers than it did before with aftetrmarket drop arms,
anyways find one and take it for a spin, get your own impressions,
Re: dont do it
ozy1 wrote:have you ever run one? have you driven one? have you built the setup or bought a bolt on kit? if you add all this info, it will give the bloke a more definitive answer,dazza30875 wrote:i wouldn't do the 5 link, as it will make your truck more able to role over.
i would try the X link set up.
good luck
thanks mate
NOW:
I just recently put a 5 link in the front of my GQ MWB ute, now this truck is a comp truck, and rearly sees road use, and by rarly i mean 20ks in the last year max,
now we damabged the chassis where the original arms mount through, so we turfed them and built a 5 link front end for it, its not a bolt on kits, its all custom buil in the shed, no cad drawings or anything major,
i dont actually have pics at the moment, but our setup uses 680mm long lowers, 450mm long uppers, lower arms are about 24 drgrees angle, uppers are at 6 degrees or there abouts, i know they asre not paralell, but hey its was a trial, on the first run it prefprmed really well, we could not fualt it, this setup also pushed the front diff forward about 2" which is great in a comp ute, but our ppanhard bar does touch the pumpkin on full compression, but owell, that will change,
I think ours drives better now upto 60km/h on the unbalanced 38" swampers than it did before with aftetrmarket drop arms,
anyways find one and take it for a spin, get your own impressions,
I've had a couple of mates break the Wizard bolt on five links. The lower links are not strong enough with the bend in them if you drive hard.
As for how 5 links drive. You will get more body roll but they will also ride much better offroad as the whole car doesn't lurch around when a front wheel rides over a bump. They feel exactly like driving with an X-link or radius arms with a bolt removed as all three free up the front end to flex.
As long as you run a swaybar on the road they are fine and once you drive with one offroad you will never want to take it off, as the car is better balanced and drives so much better.
As for how 5 links drive. You will get more body roll but they will also ride much better offroad as the whole car doesn't lurch around when a front wheel rides over a bump. They feel exactly like driving with an X-link or radius arms with a bolt removed as all three free up the front end to flex.
As long as you run a swaybar on the road they are fine and once you drive with one offroad you will never want to take it off, as the car is better balanced and drives so much better.
What's the difference between ignorance and apathy? I don't know and I don't care.
I am an insomniac dyslexic agnostic. I often lay awake all night wondering if there really is a Dog.
I am an insomniac dyslexic agnostic. I often lay awake all night wondering if there really is a Dog.
Re: dont do it
That's not a bad thing. With parallel arms they tend to dive under brakes quite badly.ozy1 wrote:i know they asre not paralell, but hey its was a trial
thnks mate for thatNelso wrote:I've had a couple of mates break the Wizard bolt on five links. The lower links are not strong enough with the bend in them if you drive hard.
As for how 5 links drive. You will get more body roll but they will also ride much better offroad as the whole car doesn't lurch around when a front wheel rides over a bump. They feel exactly like driving with an X-link or radius arms with a bolt removed as all three free up the front end to flex.
As long as you run a swaybar on the road they are fine and once you drive with one offroad you will never want to take it off, as the car is better balanced and drives so much better.
Id go 5 link for sure, had em, built em, fitted em and love em. once they are fine tuned to sui the vehicle, faultless
they are interesting at high speed on the black stuff but pay off in da bush.
if you use a good set of shocks and a quick release sway bar setup to help stability, you wont regret it..
cheers
they are interesting at high speed on the black stuff but pay off in da bush.
if you use a good set of shocks and a quick release sway bar setup to help stability, you wont regret it..
cheers
ihave had a moifed wizard five link in my gq for years and i would not recommend them i am always cracking it the chassis mounting plates and where i welded it on to the chassis because the 4 sway bar mounting bolts stripped the first time it went off road. my brother has one and he has had the same problems. an don't forget about alot less ground clearance and i bend lower arms quite abit and they are 9 mm side wall. i have had to do a far bit to get my turning circle back as well.
Its personal preference for the sway bars..........and obviously depending on your coil rates.
you will find with a 5 link you can run a firmer coil, as the 5 link allows it to flex as apposed to the standard where they run a soft spring trying to get it to flex.
I ran a 5link for many yrs, bit of body roll is minor compared to the advantages it provides.
Just make sure geometry and lengths are right if using on-road, otherwise you will get more wobble in the front.
you will find with a 5 link you can run a firmer coil, as the 5 link allows it to flex as apposed to the standard where they run a soft spring trying to get it to flex.
I ran a 5link for many yrs, bit of body roll is minor compared to the advantages it provides.
Just make sure geometry and lengths are right if using on-road, otherwise you will get more wobble in the front.
thanks that mate i will be doing a snake racing five link and what shocks did you useshotrod4x4 wrote:Its personal preference for the sway bars..........and obviously depending on your coil rates.
you will find with a 5 link you can run a firmer coil, as the 5 link allows it to flex as apposed to the standard where they run a soft spring trying to get it to flex.
I ran a 5link for many yrs, bit of body roll is minor compared to the advantages it provides.
Just make sure geometry and lengths are right if using on-road, otherwise you will get more wobble in the front.
I had a few different length shocks, depending on which coils I was running.
they were adjustable rancho's, but I think there's better on the market now.
Adjustable is the obvious choice though, so you can firm it up for onroad if needed.
Not familiar with the specs on Ryans Snake kits, just make sure you research it. Theres alot of dodgy kits around that arent worth it (a few already discredited, and could name more). Best choice is custom made by someone that knows what their doing, and I dont mean a 4wd parts fit-up shop.
they were adjustable rancho's, but I think there's better on the market now.
Adjustable is the obvious choice though, so you can firm it up for onroad if needed.
Not familiar with the specs on Ryans Snake kits, just make sure you research it. Theres alot of dodgy kits around that arent worth it (a few already discredited, and could name more). Best choice is custom made by someone that knows what their doing, and I dont mean a 4wd parts fit-up shop.
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