Took a little bit of a break to be out of town for a friend's wedding and other family events but now I'm back with some more updates!
Got around to installing all the shocks. I know the cover is ugly and dust/rust prone so at some point I'll probably cut them off but it's forecasted to be dry here for a while.
Night and day difference with the old and new shocks. Old ones were long dead ranchos and the new ones are no name FAPO P3 regular oil shocks. Running them for a few hundred miles on Dallas roads and I'll say they feel actually really good! The dampening and rebound is very refined, no sudden judders and going over bumps and imperfections in the road, they seem to eat it up no problem. The ability to dial in the softness is quite nice! I can definitely feel a difference between the 8 stops. 1 is the hardest and 8 is the softest and I'm currently running 6 front and rear with no load.
To be fair, I've always ran no name shocks so I don't have a good comparison to one of the community favorites like Ranchos or Black Max but I really do like these. We'll see how they do off road/overland in a couple of months. I know oil shocks can be prone to fatigue so I'm curious how these will hold up.
I've talked to the manufacture and they're planning on gas charged ones and even external reservoir ones later in the year. Based off of my experience so far, I'll give those other ones a go too.
If your eyes are keen, you'll see I also installed a clone Antirock. For about $100 all in, I couldn't pass giving it a try. They definitely stiffen up the front end and so far I'm pretty happy with setup. From 1 (hardest) to 5 (softest), I have them set at 2. I also have JKS disconnects too that I hope to be able to fabricate and use as linkages versus the ones you see above
I may have mentioned already but I've swapped out the steering dampener. That too was a pita where I had to cut the existing bolt but after putting in the new steering dampener, the steering felt immediately better.
You can also see where the last owner drilled another hole to relocate the track bar. Oddly enough, with the lift, I would have thought the axle would be pulled to the driver but it seems more to the passenger side. Hopefully this is just due to the hole being drilled too far over and not due to a warped frame. At any rate though, I have an adjustable track bar I plan on installing soon before I get my Currectlync to get everything sitting correctly.
Some other development, I got my hand on a hardtop for a pretty good price! It's not perfect, missing the rear glass and has a crack/hole in the ceiling but it's 95% there and I'm confident I can push the last bit to 100%. Here's a photo with the hard top fitted along with the rear glass installed