SoCalMonty
Explorer
Thanks for the replies everyone.
SoCalMonty, if I'm understanding right, did you end up mixing and matching your suspension? Are you running Ironman coil springs and torsion bars along with KYB GAJ's? This was something I was wondering about. I didn't know if it was a good idea to go KYB's for absorbers and buy springs and torsion bars from OME or Ironman. I'd be curious if you guys had opinions on this.
My assumption was that companies like ARB and Ironman tune and design everything to work as a system so that you'd only get the best performance out of each component if it was working together with the other parts from the same company.
Here's another suspension related question. When do you know that you need to / or should replace your torsion bars? When I spoke to someone at Rocky Road Outfitters about the OME kit, he recommended just buying the shocks and coils for $499 instead of the entire kit (w/torsion bars) for $7??. I am wondering if I should initially just change out shocks and possibly coils and hold off on replacing torsion bars. They don't appear to ever have been cranked, but I'll be taking a closer look this weekend.
Trust me...not nearly as much engineering as you think goes into these aftermarket parts. I've worked for a few related companies. Typically, they take the numbers from the stock unit (in this case, spring rate and wire/bar thickness), surmise they want it, for example, 9% stiffer, then contract a manufacturer to produce it (the mfr often knows more about the items than the aftermarket companies do, and will often advise the aftermarket brand as to what's possible and what's not, depending on their working relationship). Then the mfr. kicks out the parts, stamps them with the aftermarket brand's fancy logo, and you've got pretty aftermarket parts. Occasionally, it's all done in-house, but these days 95% of crap is either made from parts sourced in, or completely manufactured in, China.
Mixing and matching is perfectly OK. You just have to do your homework. Contact the companies, ask for the product's specifications. Match accordingly. In my case, as I mentioned, they work just fine together. We aren't talking racing parts here - the OME and Ironman stuff is just "+1" from OEM. Nothing extreme. Quite frequently, there will be several options for a part with marketing that makes them sound vastly different, when in reality, they are nearly identical in performance.
Think of it in other ways. How many people have a Mitsubishi engine and a K&N intake? Or a Jeep frame with Rubicon Express leaf springs? Isn't that mixing and matching too?
As for the T-bars...if you've used up all of your adjusters and your truck is still sagging, it wouldn't be a bad idea to replace them. You could always reindex them to get some lift back with more tension on the bar, but if the torsion bar has softened and sagged, it means it's not going to perform the way it should, and you can probably feel the difference at that point.
A frequently asked question from our torsion bar customers is, "How long should a torsion bar last?". The answer lies in how close to the material's yield point the bar is used. The closer the stress exerted on the bar is to the yield point of the material, the shorter the life of the bar. Consistently take a bar past its yield point and the life starts to go out of the bar. A high quality bar will not lose it's spring rate, it simply will not be as responsive as it is designed to be. An analogy would be to compare torsion bars to valve springs that test OK but the engine will not perform at its peak.