Spent a couple more hours tonight taking the rest of the shocks apart. The rear ones were nasty…oil came out black. When it’s fresh, it’s a translucent cherry red!
I have a few more parts to buy too. One hose was linked and is starting to fray…I may just run it, I don't think it was leaking. Depends how much it cost, I guess. Its not particularly hard to tear these apart, but once its installed in the Jeep, I can see it being a couple of hours worth of work to change it post restoration. The bushings I have “in inventory” are the proper length and OD, but they are 3/4” ID instead of 1/2". I’ll probably replace those. I want as much flexibility in the mounts as I can get. The bushings are cheap, and I only NEED two of them. The last thing to figure out is an over-site on my part. The front shock have the correct stem mount on top, but a standard shock eye on the bottom. Need to figure out if I buy a couple bar pins to press in, or go with a bar pin eliminator kit. Depends on my travel biases, I guess.
The valving for the rear was, ah, fairly complex. 20 total shims, with a flutter on the rebound side and a double flutter on the compression side. These came off a JKU, I guess all that complexity is needed to control the big JKU booty.
I circled the three flutter shims (fulcrums). Going to have to do some reading on this. I was really surprised to see a flutter stack on the rebound side. Like, I had to stop and think about how they were mounted and which side of the piston was compression and which was rebound. Also, the double flutter on the compression side is interesting. Accutune brags on their double flutter stack...so it makes me wonder if these were tuned before.
https://accutuneoffroad.com/accutun...VAqKH15etGrBpKu4VSVm2HK36mb_1el4dnW13tr05fQmu
No Accutune stickers on the shocks though, so no way to tell. I mean, I guess I could email them the serial numbers on the shocks, maybe? I don't know...I don't think its that important. I'm still kinda leaning on the Mopar influence. You're a pretty smart engineer to work on that kind of stuff for an OEM. Just to get a job at an OEM, you've generally gotta be an A student, plus have some real world chops. Then, the guys (and gals) who get to work on the fun stuff are a cut above that. So, its entirely possible, in my mind, that Mopar developed this crazy stack. They probably had different part numbers for JK and JKU lifts too. The shock valving might have been the only difference.
As an aside...I absolutely LOVE finding stuff like this. Its the things that make me go, "Hmmmm, I wonder"? I will get HOURS of entertainment out of this, digging into the net and trying to figure something out. Even if I throw these shocks away tomorrow, the hundred bucks and 3 hours or so I spent on them was worth it. I just love this stuff.
I have a few more parts to buy too. One hose was linked and is starting to fray…I may just run it, I don't think it was leaking. Depends how much it cost, I guess. Its not particularly hard to tear these apart, but once its installed in the Jeep, I can see it being a couple of hours worth of work to change it post restoration. The bushings I have “in inventory” are the proper length and OD, but they are 3/4” ID instead of 1/2". I’ll probably replace those. I want as much flexibility in the mounts as I can get. The bushings are cheap, and I only NEED two of them. The last thing to figure out is an over-site on my part. The front shock have the correct stem mount on top, but a standard shock eye on the bottom. Need to figure out if I buy a couple bar pins to press in, or go with a bar pin eliminator kit. Depends on my travel biases, I guess.
The valving for the rear was, ah, fairly complex. 20 total shims, with a flutter on the rebound side and a double flutter on the compression side. These came off a JKU, I guess all that complexity is needed to control the big JKU booty.
I circled the three flutter shims (fulcrums). Going to have to do some reading on this. I was really surprised to see a flutter stack on the rebound side. Like, I had to stop and think about how they were mounted and which side of the piston was compression and which was rebound. Also, the double flutter on the compression side is interesting. Accutune brags on their double flutter stack...so it makes me wonder if these were tuned before.
https://accutuneoffroad.com/accutun...VAqKH15etGrBpKu4VSVm2HK36mb_1el4dnW13tr05fQmu
No Accutune stickers on the shocks though, so no way to tell. I mean, I guess I could email them the serial numbers on the shocks, maybe? I don't know...I don't think its that important. I'm still kinda leaning on the Mopar influence. You're a pretty smart engineer to work on that kind of stuff for an OEM. Just to get a job at an OEM, you've generally gotta be an A student, plus have some real world chops. Then, the guys (and gals) who get to work on the fun stuff are a cut above that. So, its entirely possible, in my mind, that Mopar developed this crazy stack. They probably had different part numbers for JK and JKU lifts too. The shock valving might have been the only difference.
As an aside...I absolutely LOVE finding stuff like this. Its the things that make me go, "Hmmmm, I wonder"? I will get HOURS of entertainment out of this, digging into the net and trying to figure something out. Even if I throw these shocks away tomorrow, the hundred bucks and 3 hours or so I spent on them was worth it. I just love this stuff.
Last edited:
