Torsion Keys
#11
#12
The bump stop actually has two purposes - first one is, of course, prevent metal-on-metal impacts when the truck bottoms out, hence the name bump stop. The second, which not many know, is to act as a spring damper. A torsion bar, being a long shaft, is a single rate spring. The bump stop, through the material and shape, change the torsion bar system into a variable rate spring. When the suspension is loaded, it helps take some of the load for the torsion bars, and acts more like a variable rate coil spring.
That variable spring rate is why I modded the back ones to be closer to the axle, it significantly flattens out the truck in corners.
On the rear of the Dak, not sure that could be done easily as the gap to the bump stop is significant.
#13
The factory intent on the variable rate has to do with loading, not handling. Put a bunch in the back, the torsion bars and rear leaves will compress. Get enough weight on there and the bump stops will start coming into play. Without the bump stop, the torsion bars and leaf springs would need to be stiff enough that the ride would suck horribly. On the leaf springs, the bump stop comes into play at extreme loading, after the normal soft leaves then the overload leaf.
#14
The factory intent on the variable rate has to do with loading, not handling. Put a bunch in the back, the torsion bars and rear leaves will compress. Get enough weight on there and the bump stops will start coming into play. Without the bump stop, the torsion bars and leaf springs would need to be stiff enough that the ride would suck horribly. On the leaf springs, the bump stop comes into play at extreme loading, after the normal soft leaves then the overload leaf.
#16
I went to the gravel pit one day to get some dirt to fill in a major crater in my yard. I had the guy running the loader drop two scoops into the bed of my truck, thinkin' "it's dirt, shouldn't weigh that much"..... WRONG. On the weigh-out, there was 5300 lbs of dirt in the bed...... The truck was sitting not quite on the bump stops. (3/4 ton truck) but oh man, was it interesting to drive. There was very little weight on the front end, so steering was extremely light, and not real responsive. 25 miles an hour the whole way home, and sometimes, even that was too fast. Rode like a cadillac though.
#17
Lol I used to work for a construction company, and they would make me drive their 1/2-ton chevy. They would overload the bed with bricks and grave. That thing was scary driving. I used to drive it from out on Long Island into the NYC, I am amazed I never wreaked that truck or killed someone. I would drive down the Long Island Expressway. I swear at times it felt like the front wheels were off the ground. That was my first job, I was young and stupid,
HeyYou I'm going to try to get the suspension travel measurement on Thursday, the weather up here has not been cooperating. I don't have a garage and laying on the wet cold ground sucks. Thursday it's supposed to get up to 35 degrees.
HeyYou I'm going to try to get the suspension travel measurement on Thursday, the weather up here has not been cooperating. I don't have a garage and laying on the wet cold ground sucks. Thursday it's supposed to get up to 35 degrees.
#18