TopPinArcher
Well-Known Member
Northridge has them... I’ll try and find the part #What's the Fox ATS part number for the JL? And who's selling them? Thanks
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Northridge has them... I’ll try and find the part #What's the Fox ATS part number for the JL? And who's selling them? Thanks
Northridge has them... I’ll try and find the part #
Ask Northridge if they have a sale coming up, I paid 370 and shipping was quick. I’m happy with it but I also upgraded the steering system which helped tremendously!! I’m running 37’s and the stock track bar bowed quite a bit when turning and the axle was 3/4” off. The Yeti adjustable TB is awesome!!I'm about to pull the trigger on the $440 Fox ATS, everyone still happy? I'm on K02's in 315 and Dynatrac 2" lift. My rig tracks better than stock but I get a slight bobble on freeway joints and I can feel every crack and pot hole around town.
I have a JLUR with a 2" Dynatrac lift and KO2's in 315's and although the rig tracks better than stock, I do get a slight bobble when hitting freeway joints and I can feel every road imperfection. All the suspension components have been checked. I'm going to have my shoulder replaced soon so my Jeep's going to be a mall crawler for a while. I'm considering adding both the Fox ATS and Rancho drop brackets. Thoughts? Do both at the same time? One or the other?I purchased this blind since I had yet to see one installed on a JL. There were a few at SEMA but most had aftermarket axles, and the one that looked stock had it mounted over the tie rod similar to the JK.
Installation was very easy, less than 30 minutes from start to finish. No need for adjustment since it uses fixed mounting locations rather than an adjustable tie rod clamp.
Position bothers me a lot considering what these cost. I was hoping like the JK they could get it up and above the tie rod so it wouldn't get beaten up by rocks. I've seen too many JK's damage the factory stabilizer on the trail. I will probably shed a tear the first time this gets damaged. If/when that happens I probably won't get another regardless of how much it improves the steering feel.
Adjustments. Just like the JK it has 27 clicks of adjustment, with the adjustment screw a little easier to access on the JL since it points forward not down. I tried a quick spin around the block at 17 and it seemed to improve the steering feel a little bit, but on the highway at the stiffer settings is where I've found that these really shine. I cranked it up a few clicks as the steering wheel still easily self centered, and will report back tomorrow when I drive home from the shop and back on the highway.
I agree with DeVoTee, do one at the time. I would start with the drop brackets if you don't plan on going rock crawling(Those brackets tend to hang coming off rocks.) I don't think either will make a drastic difference at absorbing those road imperfections I think you are feeling, but the drop brackets will keep the control arms more parallel to the ground like the factory arms making the springs/shocks do most of the work.I have a JLUR with a 2" Dynatrac lift and KO2's in 315's and although the rig tracks better than stock, I do get a slight bobble when hitting freeway joints and I can feel every road imperfection. All the suspension components have been checked. I'm going to have my shoulder replaced soon so my Jeep's going to be a mall crawler for a while. I'm considering adding both the Fox ATS and Rancho drop brackets. Thoughts? Do both at the same time? One or the other?
thanks for the reply. I'm running C-rated at 30 psi cold. I picked up the Fox ATS at Northridge for 20% off so I'll try it first.I agree with DeVoTee, do one at the time. I would start with the drop brackets if you don't plan on going rock crawling(Those brackets tend to hang coming off rocks.) I don't think either will make a drastic difference at absorbing those road imperfections I think you are feeling, but the drop brackets will keep the control arms more parallel to the ground like the factory arms making the springs/shocks do most of the work.
Did you get the C-Rated 315's? If so, what pressure are you running in them?
Where I noticed the steering stabilizer help the most is with heavy winds, and with road imperfections that run nearly parallel to the road. It doesn't feel like the Jeep wants to follow those imperfections nearly as much as it did with the factory stabilizer. It didn't make the bumps any softer, just keeps the Jeep going straight with less effort due to varying road conditions.
Hope the shoulder replacement doesn't keep you out too long!
I need to drive our 2dr more at those speeds, but from the short time I've spent driving our 2019 2dr with the factory stabilizer I haven't experienced any of those issues(It has 37's and 2.5" lift, so it may not be a fair comparison). My business partner who owns the 2 door spends a lot of time on the highway, coming from his GTI(He had a JK years ago) I would like to think he would have mentioned similar issues on the highway.Would this help a stock JL 2 dr on the highway wandering and highway bump crazyness that follows or mainly for lifted rigs? I've always owned stock Sahara's without the more aggressive shocks of a Rubicon and would like to get some of those highway manners back, up to and including possibly replacing the shocks as well. Steering is tight, it's the aftermath of a bridge girdle or cracked pavement that jostles me around at 70 mph.
X2! I want a new stabilizer, but not comfortable with where the factory one sits. I would also be ok if there was a good skid to protect it in place of a relo alsoHas anyone figured out how to relocate this SS yet?
Looks great but that will get destroyed on the trail.I purchased this blind since I had yet to see one installed on a JL. There were a few at SEMA but most had aftermarket axles, and the one that looked stock had it mounted over the tie rod similar to the JK.
Installation was very easy, less than 30 minutes from start to finish. No need for adjustment since it uses fixed mounting locations rather than an adjustable tie rod clamp.
Position bothers me a lot considering what these cost. I was hoping like the JK they could get it up and above the tie rod so it wouldn't get beaten up by rocks. I've seen too many JK's damage the factory stabilizer on the trail. I will probably shed a tear the first time this gets damaged. If/when that happens I probably won't get another regardless of how much it improves the steering feel.
Adjustments. Just like the JK it has 27 clicks of adjustment, with the adjustment screw a little easier to access on the JL since it points forward not down. I tried a quick spin around the block at 17 and it seemed to improve the steering feel a little bit, but on the highway at the stiffer settings is where I've found that these really shine. I cranked it up a few clicks as the steering wheel still easily self centered, and will report back tomorrow when I drive home from the shop and back on the highway.
Yeah I mentioned that as one of my concerns and probably the reason I will get rid of itLooks great but that will get destroyed on the trail.