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Maybe dangerous, but...


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Was thinking today...what if someone made a longer lower control arm? If the control arm pushed the strut further out, it'd give less neg camber, more travel and wouldn't require sfd. At first glance, it'd stress the cv's more, but if you went 3" longer, you'd get 2" more lift with the same angle on cv's.

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If you are lengthening the control arm to increase travel, then you would also need a custom steering knuckle too.

But perhaps that can be handled by an adapter that bolts to the knuckle where the strut does and bridges to the strut which would be in the same place it always is (same angle...a must or else you would need an angled top spacer and then you negate the benefit of the longer control arm because you'd need a longer travel strut....)

 

That's an interesting idea. Custom lower control arms aren't hard to build.

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He's right they aren't that hard to hurt build. The reason so any people don't do it is because of all the supporting mods you need to do after, like what was said, knuckles, probably need something to account for the angle on the show tower, new and custom CD'S, new sway bar mount, etc.

 

Would be sick if anyone were to do that.

 

-Kyle

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Honestly, I wouldn't go that route if you just wanted lift. For that effort, you'd be better of considering an SAS. What the guys mentioned above is the tip of the iceberg.

 

Long travel kits for Frontier and Xterra can run up to $3000...and that's without longer CVs, coilovers, pre-runner fenders, and other things that are required and probably don't even exist for an R50. It would not be remotely cheap, and the gains would be no better than an SFD.

 

If you plan to lift your R50 any appreciable height, an SFD becomes necessary (noting that dropping the subframe is what corrects CV and steering angles, and does not provide any lift in itself).

 

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Obviously not to say it's not possible, but it wouldn't be easy. The strut is the most limiting factor on our trucks. If I were to do anything short of an SAS, it would be to eliminate the MacPherson strut system and build UCAs mounts to use Frontier/Xterra, Titan, or even 4Runner UCAs and coilovers. Then you start opening doors to more off-the-shelf lift options. (I've actually given thought to a bolt-on system that could achieve this.)

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