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Removing front sway bar

Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2006 9:41 pm
by lazercft
Removed the front sway bar on my 93 Mitsi L200 the other day, It drove quite well with only a slight amount of additional roll in the front end. I have since put it back on but would running without it improve wheel travel off road. Would this be dangerous on road though?

Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2006 9:49 pm
by cloughy
Put it in za bin

Restricts travel yet the comprimise in onroad manners its well worth discarding it

Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2006 9:51 pm
by ronoor
off road unreal on road body roll drive acordingly

Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2006 11:29 pm
by Aerenandmel
my brother got knocked back on his pink sliip till he put his sway bar back in. (NSW) So could this indead become a problem if you had an accident , Could insurance reject your claim if they picked up on it. But in the end I dont have mine in & dont plan on putting it back in.

Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2006 11:35 pm
by GQ Bear
cloughy wrote:Put it in za bin

Restricts travel yet the comprimise in onroad manners its well worth discarding it

:rofl: maybe if all 4wdrivers binned their stabi's we wouldn't have such a bad name with other motorists :lol:

BIN IT!!! :D

Posted: Sat Jun 17, 2006 11:31 am
by G_loomis
File it under B....



























for BIN :armsup: :armsup: :armsup: :armsup:

Posted: Sat Jun 17, 2006 12:03 pm
by Vulcanised
it's not that difficult to make disconnects for it if there are none available. It does make a difference on the road especially on the highway.... you won't notice much in the burbs...... but on the highway you can. a lot of people can do without them and put up with the body roll...... but if you have an accident, your insurance will be voided if they discover you removed part of your suspension. If somebody is hurt, you may well be charged. I prefer not to take the risk. I made a clever disconnect on the Rodeo when i had it... and made the ones for the pootrol.... took about an hour and a bit of muckin around. Even with 6" of lift it corners well.

Posted: Sat Jun 17, 2006 3:44 pm
by HotFourOk
RoeDao wrote:it's not that difficult to make disconnects for it if there are none available. It does make a difference on the road especially on the highway.... you won't notice much in the burbs...... but on the highway you can. a lot of people can do without them and put up with the body roll...... but if you have an accident, your insurance will be voided if they discover you removed part of your suspension. If somebody is hurt, you may well be charged. I prefer not to take the risk. I made a clever disconnect on the Rodeo when i had it... and made the ones for the pootrol.... took about an hour and a bit of muckin around. Even with 6" of lift it corners well.
pics? :D

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2006 7:30 am
by Vulcanised
of which one? the troll? i have to take a couple. Going out for a H/R burn shortly.... will get some when i get home after lunch

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2006 10:58 am
by cloughy
RoeDao wrote:it's not that difficult to make disconnects for it if there are none available. It does make a difference on the road especially on the highway.... you won't notice much in the burbs...... but on the highway you can. a lot of people can do without them and put up with the body roll...... but if you have an accident, your insurance will be voided if they discover you removed part of your suspension. If somebody is hurt, you may well be charged. I prefer not to take the risk. I made a clever disconnect on the Rodeo when i had it... and made the ones for the pootrol.... took about an hour and a bit of muckin around. Even with 6" of lift it corners well.
Its a shame that your insurance could be null and void just for altering a component of your suspension :idea:

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2006 11:15 am
by Beastmavster
Easy to remove with minimal difference, but the insurance risks are the problem.

For my Maverick, I run swaybar disconnects on the front. I will be going back to front and rear swaybars (very soft spring rates) but have disconnects at both ends.

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2006 11:45 am
by suzuki boy
The one of my suzi is in the shed somewere just incase i need to put it back on for a road worthy. CHUCK IT

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2006 11:57 am
by -Scott-
My Paj hits opposing bumpstops with the swaybar on, so I don't see the point in disconnecting it - disconnecting might allow opposite sides to hit the stops earlier, but I'm not hardcore enough for it to bother me.

I've removed the rear sway bar, and that's made a significant difference - it's much easier to keep all tyres on the ground now. I look at it that the sway bar increases the spring rate in roll - I've put in heavy duty springs which are almost double the original spring rate, so I don't need the sway bar. It certainly handles OK driving through the Adelaide Hills - I'm not the rolling roadblock! :bad-words:

Scott

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2006 12:01 pm
by HotFourOk
-Scott- wrote:I look at it that the sway bar increases the spring rate in roll - I've put in heavy duty springs which are almost double the original spring rate, so I don't need the sway bar. It certainly handles OK
This is what i did also, I put in ironman HD coils and removed the swaybar at the same time... It handles better now anyways :D

And the coils can fully compress on articulation :? Spose i should space the stops down an inch or so :lol:

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2006 12:29 pm
by badger
i took mine off my triton and it is back on now
it made a huge difference of road but towing and carying loads in the back it was undriveable

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2006 7:13 pm
by Vulcanised
cloughy wrote:
RoeDao wrote:it's not that difficult to make disconnects for it if there are none available. It does make a difference on the road especially on the highway.... you won't notice much in the burbs...... but on the highway you can. a lot of people can do without them and put up with the body roll...... but if you have an accident, your insurance will be voided if they discover you removed part of your suspension. If somebody is hurt, you may well be charged. I prefer not to take the risk. I made a clever disconnect on the Rodeo when i had it... and made the ones for the pootrol.... took about an hour and a bit of muckin around. Even with 6" of lift it corners well.
Its a shame that your insurance could be null and void just for altering a component of your suspension :idea:
my disconnects have been engineered ;) :finger:

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2006 11:50 pm
by turps
RoeDao wrote:
cloughy wrote:
RoeDao wrote:it's not that difficult to make disconnects for it if there are none available. It does make a difference on the road especially on the highway.... you won't notice much in the burbs...... but on the highway you can. a lot of people can do without them and put up with the body roll...... but if you have an accident, your insurance will be voided if they discover you removed part of your suspension. If somebody is hurt, you may well be charged. I prefer not to take the risk. I made a clever disconnect on the Rodeo when i had it... and made the ones for the pootrol.... took about an hour and a bit of muckin around. Even with 6" of lift it corners well.
Its a shame that your insurance could be null and void just for altering a component of your suspension :idea:
my disconnects have been engineered ;) :finger:
I no lawyer. But GQ's had a model with no stabiliser bar fitted front or rear, from the factory. So there should not be a problem.

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2006 8:26 am
by Vulcanised
i don't know what model either..... but mine had them so rather than risk a crap load of body roll on the highway, and i spend most of my time on the highway........ it was easier to make disconnects for it. Including the rear one, which has an in-cab disconnect. Only drama is you have to lay in the dirt to release them and lay in the dirt again to reconnect them.

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2006 9:37 am
by -Scott-
RoeDao wrote:i don't know what model either..... but mine had them so rather than risk a crap load of body roll on the highway, and i spend most of my time on the highway........ it was easier to make disconnects for it. Including the rear one, which has an in-cab disconnect. Only drama is you have to lay in the dirt to release them and lay in the dirt again to reconnect them.
So have a few more beers and you'll be laying in the dirt anyway. :D

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2006 9:40 am
by Vulcanised
-Scott- wrote:
RoeDao wrote:i don't know what model either..... but mine had them so rather than risk a crap load of body roll on the highway, and i spend most of my time on the highway........ it was easier to make disconnects for it. Including the rear one, which has an in-cab disconnect. Only drama is you have to lay in the dirt to release them and lay in the dirt again to reconnect them.
So have a few more beers and you'll be laying in the dirt anyway. :D
too many memories there!!! :shock: :shock: :lol:

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2006 10:10 pm
by Wooders
Rember sometimes having a swaybar connected can make the opposite end work better....How many times do we see pics of rigs with one end doing all the work & the other doing SFA..... ;)

Posted: Wed Jun 21, 2006 7:19 am
by slosh
I just drove for ten hours with no swaybars on swb patrol and will certainly be looking for a pair to fit this week. Worst on bumpy roads at speed, in the rain it means doing way under speed limit to stay on road. Hardly noticeable in the city or freeway tho.