
what is the best and yet cheapest way to achieve all round lift on a feroza. I know you can wind the torsion bars up front, but what about the rears. looking at a 1-2" lift.
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bru21 wrote:What happens in goat, stays in goat!
Easier to do.. yes, to an extent.RockyF70 wrote:If it was BL just go suspension its easier/cheaper, better and usually safer IMO..
Que?????HotFourOk wrote:Easier to do.. yes, to an extent.RockyF70 wrote:If it was BL just go suspension its easier/cheaper, better and usually safer IMO..
As he has been quoted, i dont think a body lift will be much harder than replacing the leaves and installing the new set of torsion bars... its much of a muchness... if you leave stock torsions in, it becomes much easier to do.
With a suspension lift you will lose suspension travel - so its by no means better than a bodylift. Also, harsher ride.
Cheaper is not always the case either.. if you are using 'new' leaves(which i would do), a bodylift is much cheaper. New torsion bars as he was quoted blow it out of the water (over $500 supplied).
Suspension lifts usually require longer shocks or shock spacers.
Safety - a Body lift doesn't raise the centre of gravity as much as a suspension lift does, so i don't know how safety is a factor.
If I had a Fez - I would make up extended shackles and wind up the standard torsion bars to begin with, and invest in some Rancho shocks and go from there. Cheapest option is always good
bru21 wrote:What happens in goat, stays in goat!
If you wind up or upgrade the torsion bars, there will be more resistance to flexing due to the higher effective spring rates. Thus it wont articulate as well.AJFeroza wrote: Que?????
A half decent suspension lift will usually improve ride and flex.
bru21 wrote:What happens in goat, stays in goat!
Ah. Yah, its a NT.AJFeroza wrote: I think you've got a Narrow Track, so can anybody help with a donor vehicle for longer shackles?????
Out of interest, where are you located?
With a BL you get absolutely no more/less flexation.... so even with the front loosing down travell on an IFS rig (invented for shopping), the gained rear travel/flex will greatly outweigh this. The only reason for bodylift is to clear better tyres. It doesn't help flex, nor does it help ramp-over as your chassis rails are still the lowest point. On some cars it MIGHT help departure/approach angles but if you have a bullbar and/or towbar these will still be the same height, so no clearance gained. Plus BL is harder cause you gotta check that your steering shaft is long enough, fab new longer bullbar brackets, and then you still might need longer brake lines... but prolly not with only 2". And BL wont be cheaper unless you DIY. A 4x4 store will still charge ludacris amounts. But if your DIYing both you may as well go Suspension lift as its far better and only about 2-300 more. and less stuffing about IMOHotFourOk wrote:Easier to do.. yes, to an extent.RockyF70 wrote:If it was BL just go suspension its easier/cheaper, better and usually safer IMO..
As he has been quoted, i dont think a body lift will be much harder than replacing the leaves and installing the new set of torsion bars... its much of a muchness... if you leave stock torsions in, it becomes much easier to do.
With a suspension lift you will lose suspension travel - so its by no means better than a bodylift. Also, harsher ride.
Cheaper is not always the case either.. if you are using 'new' leaves(which i would do), a bodylift is much cheaper. New torsion bars as he was quoted blow it out of the water (over $500 supplied).
Suspension lifts usually require longer shocks or shock spacers.
Safety - a Body lift doesn't raise the centre of gravity as much as a suspension lift does, so i don't know how safety is a factor.
If I had a Fez - I would make up extended shackles and wind up the standard torsion bars to begin with, and invest in some Rancho shocks and go from there. Cheapest option is always good
No just a model introduction during their production. They continued Narrow tracks in both Rocky and Ferozas practically to the models deaths, they even made Narrow Track SWB Rockys up until 1998 (2.8 Diesel, solid front axle), try and find one of those.HotFourOk wrote:I thought narrow tracks were older and wide tracks were newer?
Flexation... hmm okayRockyF70 wrote: With a BL you get absolutely no more/less flexation.... so even with the front loosing down travell on an IFS rig (invented for shopping), the gained rear travel/flex will greatly outweigh this.
So, because it is outweighed, does that mean my rig is better than yours... because my coil rear makes up for my IFS front??RockyF70 wrote:rear travel/flex will greatly outweigh this
I think thats what you ment to sayHotFourOk wrote:
If you dont have a clue - Save up for a few cases of beer and get people on this forum to help you:D
I like making up wordsHotFourOk wrote:Flexation... hmm okayRockyF70 wrote: With a BL you get absolutely no more/less flexation.... so even with the front loosing down travell on an IFS rig (invented for shopping), the gained rear travel/flex will greatly outweigh this.lol
As i said previously, stiffer rear springs may hinder flex. Did u read that?
So it depends on how you alter the rear suspension.
when my SOLID AXLE rig got sus lift, it flexed better both waysHotFourOk wrote:With a suspension lift you will lose suspension travel - so its by no means better than a bodylift. Also, harsher ride.
Again, read my above quoted statement in context. I said that any flex lost up front on an IFS vehicle, will be more than compensated by the gained flex in the rear ON THAT VEHICLE! So, a suspension lifted IFS will be better than a stock IFS in generall, as even though you loose up front down travel, you GAIN rear up/down travel.HotFourOk wrote:So, because it is outweighed, does that mean my rig is better than yours... because my coil rear makes up for my IFS front??RockyF70 wrote:rear travel/flex will greatly outweigh this![]()
That is what you have just claimed Nathan.
RockyF70 wrote:I think thats what you ment to sayHotFourOk wrote:
If you dont have a clue - Save up for a few cases of beer and get people on this forum to help you:D![]()
I like making up wordsHotFourOk wrote:Flexation... hmm okayRockyF70 wrote: With a BL you get absolutely no more/less flexation.... so even with the front loosing down travell on an IFS rig (invented for shopping), the gained rear travel/flex will greatly outweigh this.lol
As i said previously, stiffer rear springs may hinder flex. Did u read that?
So it depends on how you alter the rear suspension.
. And I was talking about BL. How stiff/soft the suspension is never came into it. I was in fact replying to this statement, (as this is only with IFS rigs that you loose uptravel):
when my SOLID AXLE rig got sus lift, it flexed better both waysHotFourOk wrote:With a suspension lift you will lose suspension travel - so its by no means better than a bodylift. Also, harsher ride.Such benifits that IFS users as yourself shall never have the pleasure of knowing
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Again, read my above quoted statement in context. I said that any flex lost up front on an IFS vehicle, will be more than compensated by the gained flex in the rear ON THAT VEHICLE! So, a suspension lifted IFS will be better than a stock IFS in generall, as even though you loose up front down travel, you GAIN rear up/down travel.HotFourOk wrote:So, because it is outweighed, does that mean my rig is better than yours... because my coil rear makes up for my IFS front??RockyF70 wrote:rear travel/flex will greatly outweigh this![]()
That is what you have just claimed Nathan.
Nowhere did I say that a IFS rig with lifted rear springs (coil or leaf) will be superior to a solid, with lifted springs front AND rear. Solids just flex better, accept it![]()
:(murcod wrote:My experiences with a '92 narrow track Feroza:
Bought lifted rear leaf springs (can't remember brand but a search will reveal all.....) Fitted them and wound up the front torsion bars. Ride was ridiculously hard with next to no flex in the rear; front was also lacking. I could feel the front end maxing out over bumps on road. The inside rear tyre would regularly spin around roundabouts. I would literally get launched out of the driver's seat over moderate bumps on road!?
Ended up removing one leaf from the pack and replaced the "railway sleeper" overload leaf with the one from my factory pack. Height was reduced from around 50mm to around half that, but the ride is still very firm (but liveable on a daily driver.) Wound the front down slightly and got rid of the front maxing out on bumps.
Now, to learn from this experience cost me in the vicinity of $700, just for the rear springs and bushes!? To say I was a bit peeved at the time is an understatement. Ultimately I reckon my best option could be to place the leaf I removed from my mega dollar pack into the factory originals and try that out.
Moral of the story? Mega dollar supposedly quality springs can suck and most lift options will decrease flex and give a crap ride. Choose carefully.
i just took the 1.5" shackles off my jeep, cranked the bars and went wheelin. don't have jack for down travel in the front, but, all kinds of STUFF in the rear. drove it daily for a year like this and wheel the shit outta the thing on the weekends,given, it was a bit stiffer ride on the street, but not bad.haven't so much as ripped a cv boot(now with that said, the whole thing will probably explode)Fearhoza wrote:Went to a 4wd center out of interest this afternoon. Asked for a quote on a lift. For a 45mm lift, looking at $1730 plus labour.![]()
what is the best and yet cheapest way to achieve all round lift on a feroza. I know you can wind the torsion bars up front, but what about the rears. looking at a 1-2" lift.
Does this mean you replaced your Feroza shackles with Jeep ones?rockzilla wrote:i just took the 1.5" shackles off my jeep
MightyMouse wrote:Have a combination of both options - aftermarket rear leaves and shocks to boost ride height, tyre clearance and articulation and aftermarket bars in the front - set to normal height. Front of body lifted by blocks to give clearance for tyres.
Seems to be an OK compromise for the IFS front - reasonable travel in both directions with front tyre clearance. Avoids most of the issues described by others - although doesn't have quite as much clearance under the sumpguard as can be achieved by winding the front right up.
doubleMightyMouse wrote:Have a combination of both options - aftermarket rear leaves and shocks to boost ride height, tyre clearance and articulation and aftermarket bars in the front - set to normal height. Front of body lifted by blocks to give clearance for tyres.
Seems to be an OK compromise for the IFS front - reasonable travel in both directions with front tyre clearance. Avoids most of the issues described by others - although doesn't have quite as much clearance under the sumpguard as can be achieved by winding the front right up.
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