Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Wanted to check with others that may have experienced this.  Lowered my truck 3/5 with Mcgauphys adjustable kit (spindles, struts and flip).  Truck rides terrible, most noticeable at highway speed but can feel it at any speed.  Almost feels like a washboard effect when hitting a bump.  A very smooth, freshly paved highway rides good.  2 sets of tires and wheels, driveshaft shortened and balanced, tried pinion shins, different shocks, nothing seems to help.  Rode perfect pulling into the shop, immediately noticed the difference leaving.  Any ideas?

Posted (edited)

Does it feel worse on the front end or rear end more?

 

The rear shouldn't be as bad you'd think because the flip kit means you likely had to cut the stock bump stop brackets off the frame right? Because if you don't there is hardly any travel before it hit the stock bump stop bracket.

 

For the front I'd go with coil overs on a truck that low no matter what. A lowering strut just won't ride good in my opinion. I did lowering struts on my crew cab truck but only went down 1.5in and it rides like factory.

Edited by CamGTP
Posted (edited)

Yea, factory bump stops and brackets are cut off.  I think it's more in the rear from the way it feels.  I put the factory front struts back on for a few days, didn't change anything at all.  I've also tried rear shock extenders and no extenders.

 

Recently bought one of those tiny sports cameras.  I'm going to try to mount it in a few different locations to get an idea of what's happening at speed.  

Edited by Old Chevy Lover
Update
Posted

You could also try putting a few hundred pounds in the rear, just to see if that smooths it out.

Posted

I had tried some weight, it didn't help much.  What I have figured out so far is it isn't a vibration but I think iylt has something to do with suspension.  I think any little bump reverberate thru the cab.  Even going slow, I can feel the console vibrate 4 or 5 times when I notice a bump.  Once I realized that and concentrated more on that instead of a vibration, going down the road it becomes constant from the cracks and so forth in the pavement.  That explains why fresh pavement is much better, too.  Now I have to figure out why it's happening. The puzzling part is the lowering struts, factory struts, lowering shocks and factory shocks or any combination - same result...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • I would be surprised if the diff's were not filled (with the cheapest gear lube) at the axle factory before being shipped to GM.  If you ever watched them building trucks they install the axles and all suspension parts with the frame upside down and then turn it over before its time to install the engine.     Too much gear lube in a axle can be worse than not enough especially with a lower quality GL where is get whipped up with entrained air (foam)  weakening its ability to lubricate.        
    • This is the 6.6 gasser section of the forum, you should either delete or modify your previous post as it is misleading for anyone looking for factual information on their 6.6 gas engine.
    • Well....I've done my first intake gasket. Probably wrong, but...we'll see?   Ultra black on the china walls and 1/4" up onto the sides of the intake gaskets. Permatex High Tack (couldn't find Gaskachinch) on the head side of the intake gasket. I read wrong and it says you're supposed to put it on the mating surface of the head, not the gasket. Hoping it's like a PB&J sandwich where it doesn't matter what side the PB goes on so long as there's jelly. That crap is messy/sticky and I got a dab or two on the intake port openings, tried to wipe it off. Hopefully it won't be a big deal and will only aid in sealing.   Per instructions I left the intake (top side) of the gasket dry except for a light smear of RTV around the coolant ports. Wiggling the intake in there was a bear but I had help to free me of surrounding wiring/stuff but I was basically able to set it straight down lined up with the bolt holes.   I did not think to wait until the RTV skinned over but there probably was 5-10 minutes while it sat before installing the intake.   Bolts finger tight first. Then, followed the Chilton's manual pattern to snug them to 15 lb-ft.   Waited a little over an hour, and then did the final torque in sequence again to 35 lb-ft.   Yesterday I replaced the fuel pressure regulator and got my new "nut and bolt kit" (fuel lines) installed. Damn GM used security torx on the spider, which I don't have, so I got scammed at the local HW store for an off-brand security Torx bit set.   The new driver's door mirror arrived yesterday, so, there's a chance this thing could be running and road legal tomorrow? I don't want to get my hopes up.   This will be my first time stabbing a distributor, too. Although, lucky me, someone else marked the old distributor for removal previously, I did see that. (Someone's been here before!!). Engine is still at TDC so it *should* be just a matter of transferring the mark to the new dizzy and rotating it into place.
    • He has his dad’s newer truck he’s put away. He has several old cars he rotates between him and his family. I’ve seen a restored square body and a SS Chevy truck he’s sometimes drives. He did raffle off a new suburban recently. As much as he is watched if he drove new stuff as a rule we’d know it. It would be fine by me. I don’t care what people prefer. I got one more new one in me. I’d rather my wife get one. I can’t get her out of the Genesis. Don’t tell anyone. I want her to get an electric truck. I want to put a generator in the back. Just because. She hasn’t bit yet.
    • Yes, you must have seen my thread on the Blazer. HOT GARBAGE, but I love them anyway. I'm convinced every car guy has a soft sport for an S/T series somewheres. Probably even a Panther too, if I'm being an honest car guy. That doesn't mean they aren't junk. And they definitely don't get better with age. I sometimes play with old cars, but that's by choice. I don't rely on them and they aren't my everyday fleet.   Derek plays the common man on Youtube and that's no doubt where he started. Now he has Youtube money (and Motortrend, etc). You think his crews and his wife ride around in old beaters when they're chasing him and his wrecks across the country? No he's got newer and nicer stuff for that, you'll see glimpses of it in the footage.
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...