dpike
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 28, 2020
- Threads
- 42
- Messages
- 829
- Reaction score
- 1,171
- Location
- New Jersey
- Vehicle(s)
- '20 JLUR 3.6
I meant springs.
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Okay, then you were referring to when I get the lift and replace the springs. Will do. Thanks.I meant springs.
@AcesandEightsIf you were able to get the manufacturer information you'd find many products are manufactured to a specification, but manufactured by the same company. Rancho, Monroe, Ohlins and others are made by Tenneco.
It would be out of the norm for a company to manufacture their "own" product nowadays. Most good products/manufacturers are purchased by larger companies; Tenneco for example.
So, you might ask by whom and where your shocks are made. You may find they are a different valving, and a different sticker, than the OE, or one of the other major "brands", but made by the global manufacturer.
I've used Rancho. I'm not a fan; however, I will say I used them harder than any shock should have to be used and they didn't fail (jumping a vehicle and compressing it should have blown out the seals and I damaged the housing). I don't know how it didn't fail, other than it must have been over-built. They continued to work as if new, no joke.
@AcesandingEights@longfiredragon I think you misunderstood my post. I think you should spend less, not more.
I don’t put any loctite on the shock bolts, just tighten up good….never had any problems….. but if you wanted to, I’d use orange or blue….no need to lube bolt hole, but doesn’t hurt to put a little silicon on rubber where it touches the bracket, if it does….Later this afternoon I will be installing the new shocks.
Had a couple minor questions.
If your shocks are stiffer do they change the ride height at all? Even if it's very little?
Also read somewhere to use red 272 loctite. (Supposedly the 272 you can still get loose without heat, supposedly) Now I can't find where I read it, and all the install videos I watched never mentioned loctite on any of the bolts.
Would blue 242 loctite work. (Serviceable)
So yes/no on loctite.
And one last thing, no videos used any kind of lube/grease on the shock ends where the bolts go through? Normally this is something I would consider, a thin layer of grease in the threw holes.
Thanks.
@RokyI don’t put any loctite on the shock bolts, just tighten up good….never had any problems….. but if you wanted to, I’d use orange or blue….no need to lube bolt hole, but doesn’t hurt to put a little silicon on rubber where it touches the bracket, if it does….
Sure man, no worries…… I think you’re gonna like those shocks, I’ve run almost all the other brands over the years, at one time or another, and not knocking them at all, but none of them impressed me like Fox did…. From the quality of products to their customer service, always answer the phone and are very helpful, at least in my experiences with them…….I’m sure others MMV though……..
If you wheel extremely hard and want a robust, heavy duty shock that is tuned for that then you need to check on the rock krawler 2.25 shocks. Really durable and would fit your need and be close to your price range.I have 2021 JLUW sport. Came with the Rubicon shocks.
A full lift will come later. Something like the Clayton 1.5 overland. But, right now I need shocks, two are leaking. I'm not upset because I have wheeled the piss out of my jeep this last year. It's just time for an upgrade.
I am on a 2" spacer lift currently, so someone correct me here, but I believe I just need stock size/travel shocks.
2 questions.
Can I get shocks that will work with the Clayton (or other 1.5" lift) now?
Then I won't need shocks later when I get the lift. Which will actually be around 2"s of lift on my sport.
Second question.
What shocks would some of you recommend. My budget is between $600 to $800 dollars.
There is just so many. Bilstein,fox,king,falcon,etc.
Thanks for the help.
Thanks. I don't do extreme off reading, yet. Will see what comes in the years ahead. For now I got the Fox 2.0 IFPs and I feel they will be great for what I do.If you wheel extremely hard and want a robust, heavy duty shock that is tuned for that then you need to check on the rock krawler 2.25 shocks. Really durable and would fit your need and be close to your price range.