Before you do, WHY. There is no need to.
That depends. I have a drawer full of shock tools and nitrogen in the shop. It’s way easier to just discharge and recharge than it is to build setup struts.
Before you do, WHY. There is no need to.
Discharging is easy. Re-charging takes a bottle of Nitrogen, a regulator/gage, and a hose with fitting. However, paying a shock tech to do that is pressing the easy button, and shouldn’t be expensive, since it takes about two minutes per shock. If I lived close, I’d do it for you just to meet the energizer bunny of the forum!
Did you buy a setup with the no leak fitting or make one? I've been thinking of piecing together something i can hook to a manifold guage set.
Ok so I discharge...to recharge I need the Poly Performance nitrogen valve...that go on a standard bottle like I use for mixed gas for my welder?
I need to determine if my shocks have a Schrader valve. If they don't what would you recommend for a conversion?
How many PSI? I probably can measure that with the gauge before discharge I suppose.
Good info. More money to spend.
I doubt I'd find anyone in the Eugene Springfield area to do the work. Probably have to drive to Portland.
I can't get the powder coating place to return my calls in Springfield, either. Just want to know how much to powder coat my intake before I try it myself in a rescued propane RV oven. =)
-Mac
Why not use mock ups for full ext/comp like I believe @hosejockey61 was saying?
Gotcha. Don't need to discharge nitrogen or drain the oil.
So I should be able to mock up and tack with the setup rods, then install the actual shocks and use floor jacks to articulate the axles and look for and address clearance issues.
When I watched @hosejockey61 's video he left the Poly Performance mounts about a half inch below the frame...most the outboards I've seen have them cut flush and clearanced to almost a knife edge.
-Mac
Gotcha. Don't need to discharge nitrogen or drain the oil.
So I should be able to mock up and tack with the setup rods, then install the actual shocks and use floor jacks to articulate the axles and look for and address clearance issues.
When I watched @hosejockey61 's video he left the Poly Performance mounts about a half inch below the frame...most the outboards I've seen have them cut flush and clearanced to almost a knife edge.
-Mac
So back to discharging the nitrogen...
-Mac
That depends. I have a drawer full of shock tools and nitrogen in the shop. It’s way easier to just discharge and recharge than it is to build setup struts.
I think @sab 's point is good, but when I do this (hopefully this winter) I plan to try it first with PVC mockups of similar diameter. If that doesn't work, maybe I'll hit you up for your nitrogen set-up![]()
Gotcha. Don't need to discharge nitrogen or drain the oil.
So I should be able to mock up and tack with the setup rods, then install the actual shocks and use floor jacks to articulate the axles and look for and address clearance issues.
When I watched @hosejockey61 's video he left the Poly Performance mounts about a half inch below the frame...most the outboards I've seen have them cut flush and clearanced to almost a knife edge.
-Mac
Unless the setup sticks exactly mimic the shocks in all dimensions, you really don’t know if something will hit the shock body or rod upon final assembly and cycling.
I think @sab 's point is good, but when I do this (hopefully this winter) I plan to try it first with PVC mockups of similar diameter. If that doesn't work, maybe I'll hit you up for your nitrogen set-up![]()
I think @sab 's point is good, but when I do this (hopefully this winter) I plan to try it first with PVC mockups of similar diameter. If that doesn't work, maybe I'll hit you up for your nitrogen set-up![]()
Building the setup pieces is easy. Then you don't have to have the RR hanging there getting in the way or all scratched up. Also, there isn't the cost of having all the parts need to refill. That isn't cheap.
