Parabolic Questions
Posted: Sat Sep 06, 2008 8:31 am
So, I installed a set of Rocky Mountain's parabolics on my 88" (two-leaf front and rear), and was pleased with the result. I probably got a 2 to 3 inch lift over the stock bagged out leafs I had, but I have a couple questions:
1) My truck used to have a lean to the passenger side. Now, sometimes, it seems to lean to the drivers' side. I plan to undo everything, jiggle the truck around, and then do it back up to see if everything just needed to settle, but is there anything else that could cause that?
2) The ride, I hate to say it, is just about the same as it used to be. From what I'd been told, the Parabolics should offer a sufficiently improved ride. Is there anything I can do to soften up the ride, like break-in procedures?
3) I took the truck down a trail a couple days ago, and introduced the suspension to dirt for the first time with the new springs installed. When I got back on the pavement, I noticed that the springs have developed a creak. Not a quiet little squeak that I could live with, but a full on dusty-door-in-a-haunted-mansion creeeeeeeeeeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaak. Is this normal? If it is, it adds character. If it's not, it'll drive me nuts to know something's wrong.
4) I know parabolic leafs are not supposed to touch. On four of my springs, they don't; you can clearly see daylight through the leafs. However, on my left rear, it looks like the lower leaf has flattened out, and is now in contact with the upper leaf in two places: slightly in front of the axle, and slightly to the rear. I have trouble believing this is normal, but I don't want to waste Rocky Mountain's time with a bad spring if it is indeed normal to have some contact between the leafs.
Thanks guys!
1) My truck used to have a lean to the passenger side. Now, sometimes, it seems to lean to the drivers' side. I plan to undo everything, jiggle the truck around, and then do it back up to see if everything just needed to settle, but is there anything else that could cause that?
2) The ride, I hate to say it, is just about the same as it used to be. From what I'd been told, the Parabolics should offer a sufficiently improved ride. Is there anything I can do to soften up the ride, like break-in procedures?
3) I took the truck down a trail a couple days ago, and introduced the suspension to dirt for the first time with the new springs installed. When I got back on the pavement, I noticed that the springs have developed a creak. Not a quiet little squeak that I could live with, but a full on dusty-door-in-a-haunted-mansion creeeeeeeeeeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaak. Is this normal? If it is, it adds character. If it's not, it'll drive me nuts to know something's wrong.
4) I know parabolic leafs are not supposed to touch. On four of my springs, they don't; you can clearly see daylight through the leafs. However, on my left rear, it looks like the lower leaf has flattened out, and is now in contact with the upper leaf in two places: slightly in front of the axle, and slightly to the rear. I have trouble believing this is normal, but I don't want to waste Rocky Mountain's time with a bad spring if it is indeed normal to have some contact between the leafs.
Thanks guys!