flyer92
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #61
Thanks for that explanation and I agree 100%. Only thing, is that the passenger side isn't loaded with any additional weight because the Jeep is bone stock and I haven't added a winch, heavier front bumper, etc. I had also thought about trying Rubi springs, but as we well know, the dealership can't/won't install anything other than parts that were originally designed for a specific trim level, especially when it's for the purposes of "exploratory surgery."3mm is only, roughly, a tenth of an inch. A 3mm height increase should not force the passenger side down half an inch (12mm). If anything, I'd suspect the opposite - the passenger suspension being loaded more heavily has unloaded weight from the driver's side suspension and has resulted in the 3mm increased height as the spring is dealing with less weight. It's a common thing that happens with off road vehicles as folks armor them up.
As an example, if you stick a heavy object such as a winch and steel bumper in front of the front axle, it compresses the front suspension slightly, but the front coil buckets also act as a "squishy" fulcrum and the winch/bumper act as the force applied to end of the frame, which acts as a lever, and it actually unloads the rear suspension just a bit. Also basically the same thing as tongue weight from a trailer causing the front end to unload and go light. Way more plausible, IMO, than a 3mm higher driver's side causing a 12mm dip on the passenger side.
Anyway, that would serve to plausibly explain the 3mm higher driver's side, but the question of why the passenger side is about half an inch low would still remain. IMO, it's likely a spring rate thing that Jeep just doesn't care about. I know you said the dealership swapped springs out - did they swap out just like for like (your old Sport springs for new Sport springs) or did they ever do a swap to Rubi springs? Rubi springs have a different (higher) spring rate and, if the dealership's willing, may be a good test while you wait on Stellantis. If there's a difference in the amount of sag with takeoff Rubi springs, then it would be tied to spring rate and not something like a bent or out-of-spec coil bucket. If the Rubi springs, with their higher spring rate, demonstrate the exact same amount of sag on the passenger side, then it's likely that you've got something out of spec between the axle and frame side coil perches.
In any case, I do think it's interesting that Stellantis is still calling this a "cosmetic issue," even though it is a structural or component deficiency, whether it be from the body, frame, or suspension. I plan on challenging them on this point, although I realize it's probably a lost cause. We'll see....
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