gek
Well-Known Member
Hahaha, tell me you don't understand without telling me you don't understand. I don't think I can explain it any clearer, I guess I'll try, but only this once. If this doesn't work, I fear you are beyond my grasp and it will require someone with far more patience and understanding than I posses.Yeah, all the JLs rolling off the production line with under 15k miles just have serious suspension geometry issues. It definitely isn't a faulty steering dampener. There definitely isn't three revised recalls, multiple TSBs, and an extended warranty for the issue.
The issue only happens traveling at speed while hitting a bump. It's very reproducible. Perhaps it's because of the aluminum steering knuckles, maybe it's because of the hyrdo-electric power steering design, or maybe the ball joints aren't tight. Maybe all new Jeep owners are just hitting massive pot holes and blowing the stock shock out.
I'm not the engineer, but replacing the dampener fixes the problem. Masking it or not it's the correct fix for our current stock suspension design
Any form of masking it is not the correct fix and while it may hide the issue, it does not fix the issue.
Just because a new damper stops it from occurring does not mean there is not an underlying issue. Like I said before, if your suspension is in ideal condition you should be able to drive without one.
One last attempt, maybe a better analogy.
If you are bald and you put a hat on you are still bald, it did not fix your baldness.
The steering stabilizer is like a hat for your suspension's baldness (worn/bad components).
That's the most effort I am willing to put towards explaining it. I hope this was easier for you to understand, especially the analogy, I am going to save that one for future stabilizer discussions.
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