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Rick13

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Posts posted by Rick13

  1. My 2001 LE (leather, power, heated...) are nice. Seriously, subtract the heated/power and they one of the better, more comfortable seats I've ever had in a vehicle...wait, that might not be saying much if you knew my list of previous vehicles.

  2. I was thinking along similar lines.

     

    I'm guessing that you'd just disengage the hubs and check for the wobble doing whatever makes it wobble (specific mph, type of road, turning, braking...) and see if it's repeatable. Maybe that's not your question...sorry.

     

    My thought last night when thinking about this, was regarding whether the bearings weren't seated when the bearing lock nut was put back on. There is a procedure that seats the outer bearing (torque it to a spec) and then back it off to practically 0 lb-ft (IIRC). A proper "bearing socket" can make that really easy. If you don't have one of those, I think Adv Auto (or the like) might have a kit you can borrow.

  3. I'm not trying to throw more at you, but I had a wobble develop in the front several thousand miles ago. It always occurred btw 62-67 mph (yep, that exact).

     

    I first took it for a realignment (I have lifetime) and rebalance, but to no avail. So I was convinced something else was going on. I decided to pull, check, and then repack/replace my bearings (they looked to be in very good). I checked all my suspension components up front and my steering rack. I was honestly getting a little worried going on long trips/highway speed with my family/trailer in tow. So, I took my beast to a different shop (my home mechanics shop) and asked him for the best "wheel guy" to check them out. I got them back and found out that one wheel took a ton of weights but they said I was good to go. I thought for sure that it had worked but there was still a slight wobble at given speeds - had the balancing helped?

     

    Last week I got upset when if felt like the wobble was slowly coming back. I had 36K miles on my DuraTracs and had been planning on replacing soon anyways, so I got new shoes mounted this afternoon. The tech said they balanced easily - hardly any weights on the rims. I immediately drove to the interstate and plopped it right at 65 mph (where I usually felt the wobble all the way to the steering wheel and honestly through the floorboards and through my seat). There was NO WOBBLE - not even a hint. I'm cautiously relieved.

     

    Again, I just thought I'd throw it out there.

  4. I LOVED the way mine looked for about 6 months post 2" AC lift (I think I had just over 2" up front and about 2.5" out back the day installed), but within 1 year things had really settled.

     

     

    Yes. I lost about an inch on all four corners. Funny thing, I too recently got a new tablet. It makes me look like I'm posting drunk while I'm perfectly sober. :lol:

     

    So, are you telling us end-readers that we should experience no change in your posts? :beer:

  5. So, never jumped the beast, but I've bounced both front tires in the air. Yeah, I didn't think that would count either.

     

    Sorry for anyone who's seen this already, but it really is one of my only claims to any sort of R50 fame. May not look like much, but I had to unclamp my backside from my seat after I got up. Didn't really see it myself, more felt it the whole way up. Real feeling of accomplishment though when standing atop and knowing even crazy built up rigs have issues on this.

     

    The Pathfinder is a seriously amazing vehicle to drive - it's almost like a "sleeper" of a trail rig (if that's the correct use of the term).

     

    Moab, UT, Hells Revenge Trail, Hell's Gate Obstacle:

     

    Hells%2520Gate.jpg

  6. I've been reading and thinking on this one and tried to imagine me doing this in my garage. I think I'd install the 2" coils, remove my rear shock on one side, then jack up the other side of the axle just in till I see the coil (on the side without a shock) start to get loose, then measure the distance btw the upper and lower shock mounts. Thinking this would be a good estimate of extended shock length needed, no?

     

    Have I oversimplified? Did I totally miss something? Or am I just daft?

     

    Honestly, I'm tired from work, but trying to help...

  7. Sorry if I missed it, but just be careful of the backspacing of the rims to make sure they push the wheel out far enough from the strut to clear the 32" tire. 31's typically fit without issue (from my experience), but if you are planning on 32" equivalent tires I was afraid not to mention it.

    • Like 1
  8. I agree with the thexbrit. I went coil spring lift because my stock ones bottomed out when driving over a small gutter - so they were going away regardless. That, and some of us did all our lift modifications before a full (front & rear) spacer kit was available. Others might argue that if you are truly going to off-road the beast, then taller coils will provide more compression/extension than spacers.

     

    My thoughts based on personal experience (disclaimer - your results may vary):

     

    Front: I have the 2" lift coils up front and I'm not totally sure it provides any better articulation than stock springs with spacers, but that might be more due to the limits of our totally awesome struts than the type/length of coils used.

     

    Rear: I would bet if you compare a rear 4" spacer/2" coil lift to a pure 6" coil spring lift that the 6" coil will allow more total articulation [NOTE - maybe we should organize that and post it up in a pinned thread somewhere so we have some data to go with/against that theory] But if you are only going a couple inches, spacers are definitely cheaper/easier to deal with.

    • Like 1
  9. Being that Jimmy made this comment almost 5 years ago and he hasn't been on-line in 2-1/2 years, I'm not sure you'll get a response or explanation.

     

    Not being a jerk, just something I wanted to note so you aren't holding your breath.

  10. Man, someone please correct me if I missed the boat on this one, but I SWEAR I remember being told by AC (like 8 years ago) that the Rancho 9000XL's I bought from them (for an arm/leg) were originally for a 1998-2003 Dodge Durango.

     

    The specs SilverPath posted sound close to what I had but I think his must extend much more than my Rancho's did - I thought mine only extended to like 25" or there abouts.

     

    Sorry I can't remember more, just trying to help...

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