3" lift - change anything else? Shocks, axles?
#1
3" lift - change anything else? Shocks, axles?
Cheers everyone,
I am looking into a slight lift on my 2004 RAM 1500 4x5 5.7 HEMI, I found some nice 3" lift kits on eBay that have different torsion bar keys and lift blocks in the rear.
I know this is just the "cheap way" to do it, but as I don't do any real serious offroading and just want it for the looks and to better clear the 35" tires I am aiming for something like that.
So is there anything else I need to change in that process? Like lowering the differential or crazy stuff like different axles, joints?
The kit comes with extensions for the front shock absorbers, but not the rears? I am on Bilstein 4600.
Thanks a lot guys!
I am looking into a slight lift on my 2004 RAM 1500 4x5 5.7 HEMI, I found some nice 3" lift kits on eBay that have different torsion bar keys and lift blocks in the rear.
I know this is just the "cheap way" to do it, but as I don't do any real serious offroading and just want it for the looks and to better clear the 35" tires I am aiming for something like that.
So is there anything else I need to change in that process? Like lowering the differential or crazy stuff like different axles, joints?
The kit comes with extensions for the front shock absorbers, but not the rears? I am on Bilstein 4600.
Thanks a lot guys!
#2
#3
I already have them on the car, I had to trim it a litte bit at the front bumper and at the fender though.
It does clear them with just the keys cranked up but it only slightly rubs at full lock when braking hard at the inner fender. I already cut away a small piece but don't want to cut that much more and I think the additional lift would help a lot with that.
So will I need different parts other than the lift kit? Front upper control arms maybe?
It does clear them with just the keys cranked up but it only slightly rubs at full lock when braking hard at the inner fender. I already cut away a small piece but don't want to cut that much more and I think the additional lift would help a lot with that.
So will I need different parts other than the lift kit? Front upper control arms maybe?
#4
If you have them on there already, with NO lift..... and just cranked torsion bars, likely you will just need to be careful when driving. I don't know that re-indexed torsion keys are going to get you any more lift, than what you got from just cranking the stock fellers. It isn't the keys that limit lift, it's the ball joints/CV joints. Put too much of an angle on them, and it drastically shortens their lifespan, and there is also the higher potential for things breaking. Tossing a balljoint while on the freeway is no fun at all. Far too exciting.
#5
In my case, the screw to crank the keys it at the maximum, so I can't get it any higher with that.
I read of some people using a longer screw, but I also read that this would cause high stress on that screw and it might break. That's why I was thinking of different keys.
Sure, ball joints will be at a non-ideal angle. I know that there are different front upper control arms to compensate for that.
Also there are different axles in the front, too.
But I don't know how the rest of the drivetrain will behave? Anyone got any experience?
I read of some people using a longer screw, but I also read that this would cause high stress on that screw and it might break. That's why I was thinking of different keys.
Sure, ball joints will be at a non-ideal angle. I know that there are different front upper control arms to compensate for that.
Also there are different axles in the front, too.
But I don't know how the rest of the drivetrain will behave? Anyone got any experience?
#6
Larger tires with the same gears is going to beat up your bottom end torque, but, it'll go faster. (and the speedometer will be wrong....) The biggest issue is with the front end, ball joints and CV axles.... the rest simply won't care. Oh, gas mileage will suffer with the larger tires too.
#7
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#8
Larger tires with the same gears is going to beat up your bottom end torque, but, it'll go faster. (and the speedometer will be wrong....) The biggest issue is with the front end, ball joints and CV axles.... the rest simply won't care. Oh, gas mileage will suffer with the larger tires too.
Speedometer is corrected with my Diablosport Predator, so no big thing.
Bottom end torque is still enough I think, doesn't feel really slower compared to 285/70R17 I had before.
I contacted a guy on YT, he had a similar lift for 40k miles now and he said he had no trouble with the ball joints.
Maybe I should just try it out? Replacing the CV axles has been on my list anway, feeling a slight vibration after cranking the keys...
#9