Spring over questions
After going wheeling last week, I found I really do need more height and
bigger tires. My 85/91 YJ-7 has the 258 and T-5 tranny along with stock diffs with 3" of body lift and 31-10.50 TRXUS tires, but needs more clearance for larger tires. I have plenty of clearance with my current tires. I recently replaced the front springs and all the shocks. It's amazing how well it rides. I keep hearing about doing a spring over conversion. What all odd problems might come from this? Is it worth the effort? Are there steering problems that need to be remedied? I drive my Jeep both on and off road. How does the conversion affect ride quality? Are there better kits out there, or are they pretty much all the same? With spring over how big of tires would you go with? Lots of questions, I know, but any help will be greatly appreciated. Thanks -- Chuck I didn't fight my way to the top of the food chain to be a vegetarian |
Re: Spring over questions
Hi Chuck,
The correct way to do it is with add a leaf for more rigidity then have the combination re-arced at your local spring shop. Repositioned shock mounts with new shocks with longer travel, Modified driveshaft slip joints, with constant velocity universal joints. If you still want spring wrap and broken shafts: http://www.dehesa4x4.com/osburn/tech/soa.htm God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/ Chuck wrote: > > After going wheeling last week, I found I really do need more height and > bigger tires. My 85/91 YJ-7 has the 258 and T-5 tranny along with stock > diffs with 3" of body lift and 31-10.50 TRXUS tires, but needs more > clearance for larger tires. I have plenty of clearance with my current > tires. I recently replaced the front springs and all the shocks. It's > amazing how well it rides. > > I keep hearing about doing a spring over conversion. What all odd problems > might come from this? Is it worth the effort? Are there steering problems > that need to be remedied? I drive my Jeep both on and off road. How does > the conversion affect ride quality? Are there better kits out there, or are > they pretty much all the same? With spring over how big of tires would you > go with? > > Lots of questions, I know, but any help will be greatly appreciated. > > Thanks > > -- > Chuck > > I didn't fight my way to the top of the food chain to be a vegetarian |
Re: Spring over questions
Hi Chuck,
The correct way to do it is with add a leaf for more rigidity then have the combination re-arced at your local spring shop. Repositioned shock mounts with new shocks with longer travel, Modified driveshaft slip joints, with constant velocity universal joints. If you still want spring wrap and broken shafts: http://www.dehesa4x4.com/osburn/tech/soa.htm God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/ Chuck wrote: > > After going wheeling last week, I found I really do need more height and > bigger tires. My 85/91 YJ-7 has the 258 and T-5 tranny along with stock > diffs with 3" of body lift and 31-10.50 TRXUS tires, but needs more > clearance for larger tires. I have plenty of clearance with my current > tires. I recently replaced the front springs and all the shocks. It's > amazing how well it rides. > > I keep hearing about doing a spring over conversion. What all odd problems > might come from this? Is it worth the effort? Are there steering problems > that need to be remedied? I drive my Jeep both on and off road. How does > the conversion affect ride quality? Are there better kits out there, or are > they pretty much all the same? With spring over how big of tires would you > go with? > > Lots of questions, I know, but any help will be greatly appreciated. > > Thanks > > -- > Chuck > > I didn't fight my way to the top of the food chain to be a vegetarian |
Re: Spring over questions
Hi Chuck,
The correct way to do it is with add a leaf for more rigidity then have the combination re-arced at your local spring shop. Repositioned shock mounts with new shocks with longer travel, Modified driveshaft slip joints, with constant velocity universal joints. If you still want spring wrap and broken shafts: http://www.dehesa4x4.com/osburn/tech/soa.htm God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/ Chuck wrote: > > After going wheeling last week, I found I really do need more height and > bigger tires. My 85/91 YJ-7 has the 258 and T-5 tranny along with stock > diffs with 3" of body lift and 31-10.50 TRXUS tires, but needs more > clearance for larger tires. I have plenty of clearance with my current > tires. I recently replaced the front springs and all the shocks. It's > amazing how well it rides. > > I keep hearing about doing a spring over conversion. What all odd problems > might come from this? Is it worth the effort? Are there steering problems > that need to be remedied? I drive my Jeep both on and off road. How does > the conversion affect ride quality? Are there better kits out there, or are > they pretty much all the same? With spring over how big of tires would you > go with? > > Lots of questions, I know, but any help will be greatly appreciated. > > Thanks > > -- > Chuck > > I didn't fight my way to the top of the food chain to be a vegetarian |
Re: Spring over questions
Hi Chuck,
The correct way to do it is with add a leaf for more rigidity then have the combination re-arced at your local spring shop. Repositioned shock mounts with new shocks with longer travel, Modified driveshaft slip joints, with constant velocity universal joints. If you still want spring wrap and broken shafts: http://www.dehesa4x4.com/osburn/tech/soa.htm God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/ Chuck wrote: > > After going wheeling last week, I found I really do need more height and > bigger tires. My 85/91 YJ-7 has the 258 and T-5 tranny along with stock > diffs with 3" of body lift and 31-10.50 TRXUS tires, but needs more > clearance for larger tires. I have plenty of clearance with my current > tires. I recently replaced the front springs and all the shocks. It's > amazing how well it rides. > > I keep hearing about doing a spring over conversion. What all odd problems > might come from this? Is it worth the effort? Are there steering problems > that need to be remedied? I drive my Jeep both on and off road. How does > the conversion affect ride quality? Are there better kits out there, or are > they pretty much all the same? With spring over how big of tires would you > go with? > > Lots of questions, I know, but any help will be greatly appreciated. > > Thanks > > -- > Chuck > > I didn't fight my way to the top of the food chain to be a vegetarian |
Re: Spring over questions
SOA is the way to go, Chuck.
It is absolutely worth the effort over lift springs because it will ride just as well as stock, and outflex most lift springs. Also, it frees up a TON of space under the axles giving you even more clearance. There really are no 'odd' problems with spring-over. Most trucks and 4x4's come from the factory with a spring-over type setup. The only problem that I encountered was the drag link vs pass front spring clearance. On a hard right turn, the drag link would sometimes graze the spring. The spring shaved off a wee bit of the drag link, providing the needed clearance. SOA kills stock wrangler leaf packs. The way to combat this is to buy someone else's stock wrangler leaf packs. Whichever main leaves are worse, cut off the spring eyes and add them below the main leaf in the good pack. Also throw in the small leaf at the bottom to give your drag link more clearance and add a little hieght. The extra main leaf will keep your springs alive and give you about 1" extra. Alternatively, you can buy springs designed for Spring over from Rubicon, with or without added lift. A kit is not required. All you need is: 4 spring perches, 4" drop pitman arm, longer rear brake line, 4 shocks, and a CV drive shaft with SYE from Tom Wood for the rear driveline. The front driveline and brake lines are plenty long enough. With a spring-over on stock springs, you can clear 35's without trimming. I ran 33's on a sprung-over 89 YJ with great success. You mentioned having stock axles. If you have the D35 rear, most don't reccomend going above 33's because of breakage issues. HTH, Carl "Chuck" <kb9kfs@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message news:YXfUf.41058$_S7.37947@newssvr14.news.prodigy. com... > After going wheeling last week, I found I really do need more height and > bigger tires. My 85/91 YJ-7 has the 258 and T-5 tranny along with stock > diffs with 3" of body lift and 31-10.50 TRXUS tires, but needs more > clearance for larger tires. I have plenty of clearance with my current > tires. I recently replaced the front springs and all the shocks. It's > amazing how well it rides. > > I keep hearing about doing a spring over conversion. What all odd > problems might come from this? Is it worth the effort? Are there > steering problems that need to be remedied? I drive my Jeep both on and > off road. How does the conversion affect ride quality? Are there better > kits out there, or are they pretty much all the same? With spring over > how big of tires would you go with? > > Lots of questions, I know, but any help will be greatly appreciated. > > Thanks > > -- > Chuck > > I didn't fight my way to the top of the food chain to be a vegetarian > |
Re: Spring over questions
SOA is the way to go, Chuck.
It is absolutely worth the effort over lift springs because it will ride just as well as stock, and outflex most lift springs. Also, it frees up a TON of space under the axles giving you even more clearance. There really are no 'odd' problems with spring-over. Most trucks and 4x4's come from the factory with a spring-over type setup. The only problem that I encountered was the drag link vs pass front spring clearance. On a hard right turn, the drag link would sometimes graze the spring. The spring shaved off a wee bit of the drag link, providing the needed clearance. SOA kills stock wrangler leaf packs. The way to combat this is to buy someone else's stock wrangler leaf packs. Whichever main leaves are worse, cut off the spring eyes and add them below the main leaf in the good pack. Also throw in the small leaf at the bottom to give your drag link more clearance and add a little hieght. The extra main leaf will keep your springs alive and give you about 1" extra. Alternatively, you can buy springs designed for Spring over from Rubicon, with or without added lift. A kit is not required. All you need is: 4 spring perches, 4" drop pitman arm, longer rear brake line, 4 shocks, and a CV drive shaft with SYE from Tom Wood for the rear driveline. The front driveline and brake lines are plenty long enough. With a spring-over on stock springs, you can clear 35's without trimming. I ran 33's on a sprung-over 89 YJ with great success. You mentioned having stock axles. If you have the D35 rear, most don't reccomend going above 33's because of breakage issues. HTH, Carl "Chuck" <kb9kfs@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message news:YXfUf.41058$_S7.37947@newssvr14.news.prodigy. com... > After going wheeling last week, I found I really do need more height and > bigger tires. My 85/91 YJ-7 has the 258 and T-5 tranny along with stock > diffs with 3" of body lift and 31-10.50 TRXUS tires, but needs more > clearance for larger tires. I have plenty of clearance with my current > tires. I recently replaced the front springs and all the shocks. It's > amazing how well it rides. > > I keep hearing about doing a spring over conversion. What all odd > problems might come from this? Is it worth the effort? Are there > steering problems that need to be remedied? I drive my Jeep both on and > off road. How does the conversion affect ride quality? Are there better > kits out there, or are they pretty much all the same? With spring over > how big of tires would you go with? > > Lots of questions, I know, but any help will be greatly appreciated. > > Thanks > > -- > Chuck > > I didn't fight my way to the top of the food chain to be a vegetarian > |
Re: Spring over questions
SOA is the way to go, Chuck.
It is absolutely worth the effort over lift springs because it will ride just as well as stock, and outflex most lift springs. Also, it frees up a TON of space under the axles giving you even more clearance. There really are no 'odd' problems with spring-over. Most trucks and 4x4's come from the factory with a spring-over type setup. The only problem that I encountered was the drag link vs pass front spring clearance. On a hard right turn, the drag link would sometimes graze the spring. The spring shaved off a wee bit of the drag link, providing the needed clearance. SOA kills stock wrangler leaf packs. The way to combat this is to buy someone else's stock wrangler leaf packs. Whichever main leaves are worse, cut off the spring eyes and add them below the main leaf in the good pack. Also throw in the small leaf at the bottom to give your drag link more clearance and add a little hieght. The extra main leaf will keep your springs alive and give you about 1" extra. Alternatively, you can buy springs designed for Spring over from Rubicon, with or without added lift. A kit is not required. All you need is: 4 spring perches, 4" drop pitman arm, longer rear brake line, 4 shocks, and a CV drive shaft with SYE from Tom Wood for the rear driveline. The front driveline and brake lines are plenty long enough. With a spring-over on stock springs, you can clear 35's without trimming. I ran 33's on a sprung-over 89 YJ with great success. You mentioned having stock axles. If you have the D35 rear, most don't reccomend going above 33's because of breakage issues. HTH, Carl "Chuck" <kb9kfs@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message news:YXfUf.41058$_S7.37947@newssvr14.news.prodigy. com... > After going wheeling last week, I found I really do need more height and > bigger tires. My 85/91 YJ-7 has the 258 and T-5 tranny along with stock > diffs with 3" of body lift and 31-10.50 TRXUS tires, but needs more > clearance for larger tires. I have plenty of clearance with my current > tires. I recently replaced the front springs and all the shocks. It's > amazing how well it rides. > > I keep hearing about doing a spring over conversion. What all odd > problems might come from this? Is it worth the effort? Are there > steering problems that need to be remedied? I drive my Jeep both on and > off road. How does the conversion affect ride quality? Are there better > kits out there, or are they pretty much all the same? With spring over > how big of tires would you go with? > > Lots of questions, I know, but any help will be greatly appreciated. > > Thanks > > -- > Chuck > > I didn't fight my way to the top of the food chain to be a vegetarian > |
Re: Spring over questions
SOA is the way to go, Chuck.
It is absolutely worth the effort over lift springs because it will ride just as well as stock, and outflex most lift springs. Also, it frees up a TON of space under the axles giving you even more clearance. There really are no 'odd' problems with spring-over. Most trucks and 4x4's come from the factory with a spring-over type setup. The only problem that I encountered was the drag link vs pass front spring clearance. On a hard right turn, the drag link would sometimes graze the spring. The spring shaved off a wee bit of the drag link, providing the needed clearance. SOA kills stock wrangler leaf packs. The way to combat this is to buy someone else's stock wrangler leaf packs. Whichever main leaves are worse, cut off the spring eyes and add them below the main leaf in the good pack. Also throw in the small leaf at the bottom to give your drag link more clearance and add a little hieght. The extra main leaf will keep your springs alive and give you about 1" extra. Alternatively, you can buy springs designed for Spring over from Rubicon, with or without added lift. A kit is not required. All you need is: 4 spring perches, 4" drop pitman arm, longer rear brake line, 4 shocks, and a CV drive shaft with SYE from Tom Wood for the rear driveline. The front driveline and brake lines are plenty long enough. With a spring-over on stock springs, you can clear 35's without trimming. I ran 33's on a sprung-over 89 YJ with great success. You mentioned having stock axles. If you have the D35 rear, most don't reccomend going above 33's because of breakage issues. HTH, Carl "Chuck" <kb9kfs@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message news:YXfUf.41058$_S7.37947@newssvr14.news.prodigy. com... > After going wheeling last week, I found I really do need more height and > bigger tires. My 85/91 YJ-7 has the 258 and T-5 tranny along with stock > diffs with 3" of body lift and 31-10.50 TRXUS tires, but needs more > clearance for larger tires. I have plenty of clearance with my current > tires. I recently replaced the front springs and all the shocks. It's > amazing how well it rides. > > I keep hearing about doing a spring over conversion. What all odd > problems might come from this? Is it worth the effort? Are there > steering problems that need to be remedied? I drive my Jeep both on and > off road. How does the conversion affect ride quality? Are there better > kits out there, or are they pretty much all the same? With spring over > how big of tires would you go with? > > Lots of questions, I know, but any help will be greatly appreciated. > > Thanks > > -- > Chuck > > I didn't fight my way to the top of the food chain to be a vegetarian > |
Re: Spring over questions
I don't know carl, I think you are ignoring alot of the other problems
associated with SOA. Especially if you were to follow and read Bill's link, there are alot of other factors to consider to an SOA. He'd get the same amount of lift with a 4.5" Rubicon express extreme lift, and wouldn't have all of the other problems associated with SOA.......I really don't think its cheaper if it's done "correctly" Carl wrote: >SOA is the way to go, Chuck. > >It is absolutely worth the effort over lift springs because it will ride >just as well as stock, and outflex most lift springs. Also, it frees up a >TON of space under the axles giving you even more clearance. > >There really are no 'odd' problems with spring-over. Most trucks and 4x4's >come from the factory with a spring-over type setup. > >The only problem that I encountered was the drag link vs pass front spring >clearance. On a hard right turn, the drag link would sometimes graze the >spring. The spring shaved off a wee bit of the drag link, providing the >needed clearance. > >SOA kills stock wrangler leaf packs. The way to combat this is to buy >someone else's stock wrangler leaf packs. Whichever main leaves are worse, >cut off the spring eyes and add them below the main leaf in the good pack. >Also throw in the small leaf at the bottom to give your drag link more >clearance and add a little hieght. The extra main leaf will keep your >springs alive and give you about 1" extra. Alternatively, you can buy >springs designed for Spring over from Rubicon, with or without added lift. > >A kit is not required. All you need is: 4 spring perches, 4" drop pitman >arm, longer rear brake line, 4 shocks, and a CV drive shaft with SYE from >Tom Wood for the rear driveline. The front driveline and brake lines are >plenty long enough. > >With a spring-over on stock springs, you can clear 35's without trimming. I >ran 33's on a sprung-over 89 YJ with great success. You mentioned having >stock axles. If you have the D35 rear, most don't reccomend going above 33's >because of breakage issues. > >HTH, > >Carl > >> After going wheeling last week, I found I really do need more height and >> bigger tires. My 85/91 YJ-7 has the 258 and T-5 tranny along with stock >[quoted text clipped - 13 lines] >> >> Thanks -- Message posted via http://www.carkb.com |
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