And this is how I know that you do not understand what sagging means.
A decrease in ride height over time is how I've always used that term
Indicating a spring that has less resistance to load than it used to
And this is how I know that you do not understand what sagging means.
A decrease in ride height over time is how I've always used that term
Indicating a spring that has less resistance to load than it used to
A decrease in ride height over time is how I've always used that term
Indicating a spring that has less resistance to load than it used to
Correct for common discussion agree.
And….if you walked up to a TJ and had not been there to measure it over time?
This is correct. It has nothing to do with advertised lift height.
Correct for common discussion agree.
And….if you walked up to a TJ and had not been there to measure it over time?
I think i would say "settle" to describe the current ride height.
Again, repeating unhelpful information.
Walk up to a TJ you haven’t ever seen, how does one deduce if the springs are sagging?
You have more time on your hand than sense.
Your posts here are BS. You babble “ride height” blah.
Thanks genius.
If the springs are advertised 3.25”, they were designed to be 3.25” on a TJ.
He wasn’t there unless you’ve got a DeLorean or phone booth he can use doctor who.
How the F is he supposed to know what they were when they were put on.l and if they happen to be 3.5” or whatever.
If they were Advertised as 3.25”, they were designed as 3.25”, and they measure now 3.25”, that’s as good of information under this circumstance provided you can get.
You have More time to babble the same BS than sense.
All suspension springs are built around a rate that is done via a number of pounds per inch of compression and that is the spring rate. The company doesn't call up the spring maker and tell them they want a 4" spring, they give them a rate expressed in pounds per inch, coil bind height, and free height.
If you have a rig that is within the reasonably narrow weight range that compresses them to the desired or advertised ride height, then you are the target buyer. If you have a heavy rig that overcompresses the springs, they aren't sagging, you are just outside the range. The way you tell that is by measuring but that does NOT automatically mean the spring is sagging. Your ass may just be too big.
FYI- I tend to concur with the genius, so there is that.
I'm trying to get you to understand how springs are made and spec'd out. Just so you know and can maybe try to understand, I've put all of Currie's/Rock Jock rear springs under a rig before trying to dial in ride height for shock bias.Good information and you've got the experience.
Now that we're down the rabbit hole, and in my first post I said I DIDN"T want to go down before mr genius gets rude and still doesn't answer what he said he did...
Just a question, when they provide that rate expressed in pounds per inch, coil bind height, and free height....do they not use any "target buyer" data to provide one set of requests vs the other? Do they not have a "stock TJ under X (would be somewhat normal weight conditions) that they take into consideration, and if it does come to that then it would, under most circumstances, fall on the lift height a Product Manager lists it?
Does the Product Manager not have any input to say "Let's, under these somewhat common standards, create ones that hit 2" lift, 3.5" lift, 4" lift?" So that we can market them, and not get 90% come back with a "You said 4", it came in at 6.5" or 2.5" or 2.75"? Cost to take the call, cost for return, impact in quality reputation in the market? All provide negative impacts.
There has to be some quality control, so that it hits the "mark" on the target customer, and the Product Management and Company overall produces a product that consistently hits that mark within reason.
So, It would seem to me, a reasonable person can look at a TJ with what were marketed as 3.25" springs....where the designer sent technical specs (ppi, coil bh, free height) that hit that target customer, one would reason a stock TJ would fit that.
So If I'm looking at a TJ that doesn't have my big ass sitting in it (ass isn't the problem more the middle, ha) but no one in it, not 1,000 LB monstrosity of a bumper with a massive toolbox full of tools and sets of extra axles in the back. Just the stock seat and a soft top and a normal spare on the stock mount....
IF a reasonable guy measured the day they bought the used Jeep, and the Springs were within close reason to what was marketed (and manufactured to tech specs NOT height) but the TJ looks normal stock type config interior and bumper etc, and it measured to close to that listed height.....that, AND that TJ has what looks to be a normal rake, nothing jumping out like the Jeeps ass sagging or the front way up like a low rider....then it's ok to say "I see no evidence that the springs are "sagging"?
I'm trying to get you to understand how springs are made and spec'd out. ...
We do not know if there was any settling. Nor do we really care. All we can know at that moment of introduction is what the current ride height is. The decision at the moment is to change the ride height or to leave it alone.
When I use settle it describes to me the act of the vehicle having its full weight compress the springs and stopping at a given height.
I can't say I'm following this thread, I'll have to trust you on what decisions are being made or not
Refer back to the very beginning where the op wanted to replace the springs because he heard somewhere that they sag, settle, collapse, whatever. None of that matters when the only question is whether or not the springs are creating the desired ride height, followed by a decision resulting from answering that question.
He does not care about an advertised lift height or what the springs might have done in an unknown past. He cares about what the springs are doing right now.
I'm trying to get you to understand how springs are made and spec'd out. Just so you know and can maybe try to understand, I've put all of Currie's/Rock Jock rear springs under a rig before trying to dial in ride height for shock bias.
All were 4" of some iteration, all but 1 delivered other than 4" because my rig's weight didn't match the design weight. Ass wasn't literal, it was pointed at the rig. I know you can fully understand that a TJ will have a different ride height on the rear springs based on a few things.
33 or 35" spare.
Lightweight tub mounted carrier, or heavy swing-out with a 33 or a 35 on it.
Spare in the tub.
Tuffy box crammed with every spare part and tool that will fit.
Tuffy box, swing out, 35, hard top, etc.
As the product developer, are you going to have 50 different springs so you can tell Joe in the back to run and grab the box of springs with the picture of the swing out, 35, and hard top on it, or are you going to make an average 4" spring for the average weight and call it a fucking day?
This isn't about quality control, it is about averages, how much it costs to build a run of springs and what you care about as a suspension seller. John Currie has or had at least 5 different 4" springs for the TJ platform, what does that tell you about how everyone else does it?
I'm trying to get you to understand how springs are made and spec'd out. Just so you know and can maybe try to understand, I've put all of Currie's/Rock Jock rear springs under a rig before trying to dial in ride height for shock bias.
All were 4" of some iteration, all but 1 delivered other than 4" because my rig's weight didn't match the design weight. Ass wasn't literal, it was pointed at the rig. I know you can fully understand that a TJ will have a different ride height on the rear springs based on a few things.
33 or 35" spare.
Lightweight tub mounted carrier, or heavy swing-out with a 33 or a 35 on it.
Spare in the tub.
Tuffy box crammed with every spare part and tool that will fit.
Tuffy box, swing out, 35, hard top, etc.
As the product developer, are you going to have 50 different springs so you can tell Joe in the back to run and grab the box of springs with the picture of the swing out, 35, and hard top on it, or are you going to make an average 4" spring for the average weight and call it a fucking day?
This isn't about quality control, it is about averages, how much it costs to build a run of springs and what you care about as a suspension seller. John Currie has or had at least 5 different 4" springs for the TJ platform, what does that tell you about how everyone else does it?
Mr. Currie said there will be springs to work with a few different vehicle weights to provide 4" of lift height. He also said we know it depends on weight, that's why we are doing more than one rate.All you said being accurate, I would love to hear ole Mr Currie's meeting when someone said "These will be 4" springs"....and the Design Engineer said "It Depends".....and the Head of Marketing or Sales says "Well, not sure how many we sell if we put for spring heigh
