So it's time for me to spend some money on suspension. I hope this post isn't too boring and long but here goes. I'm on my second set of Bilstein 5100 adjustable shocks. The first set broke at the weld above the eyelet. The second set is leaking fluid at the weld and could brake again at any moment. I'm obviously done with Bilstein. I think using the shocks at their full extension is what's causing the issues. I'd like to invest in a more expensive coilover design with aftermarket upper control arms. My highest priority is reliability. My Tundra is my lifeline. It's my daily driver, my work truck and my overland vehicle. When that shock failed I was almost 2 hours out of town. With my job I'm driving from about 100-200 miles a day monday through friday. 50+ of those daily miles are off road. Most of the time with out even a dirt road to our remote sites. That's not counting the camping/overland that happens on the weekends. The truck is always loaded with at least 500lbs of gear in the bed and on the lumber rack. I'm no race truck. I take the worst terrain at a slow pace trying to take the best route.
Anyways I've been reluctant to get fancy aftermarket parts as they usually need constant maintenance/replacement. Also rebuildable shocks take weeks to get back. It's hard for me to have more than a day or two of downtime at any given moment. I know I need to just bite the bullet and spend some good money to improve the front end. I just want to make the right decision. These Tundras don't have much aftermarket support so I guess that makes the decision making a bit easier.
Upper Control Arms:
As far as I know for upper control arms my only two options are Camburg Uni-ball UCAs or Light Racing UCAs. I'm a little biased on this decision and want to go with LR. I've had the Camburg UCAs on my past 2wd Tundra and just couldn't keep them maintained. I spent so much time cleaning them and using the dry lube and they'd still squeak like crazy. Then again I have zero experience with the Light Racing product. The covered ball join vs the Uniball heim joint seems like it could prove to be a more reliable option. Any opinions are much appreciated.
Coilovers
Now for shocks am I right to be considering the offerings from Icon, Fox, King, Toyotec? Any other I should consider? What specs can I look up for these shocks? I know valving and spring rate is important on a per vehicle basis but I can't seem to find any relevant specs other than just blatant marketing.
Icon: So many people rave about their Icons. They look like a well built shock and I really like the idea of their neoprene covers. From what I gather they're a shock designed for offroad racing. Super high speed travel rather than a typical overland vehicle that would be taking things slow. Is it correct to assume the ride will be more stiff? Aren't they designed to take high speed bumps really well but traveling at slow speeds on rough terrain be outside their real advantage?
King and Fox: I don't see many people with these two brands. I'm having a hard time finding people first hand experience with them and the Tundra. But both seem like top tier manufactures of shocks though.
Toyotec: I'm currently leaning towards Toyotec since they seem to be concentrated on Toyota specifically. ToyTec's BOSS front coilover seems like it might be the best fit for the truck. Says it's valved specifically for the Tundra (I would think the Bilsteins would be too?). I've read a few happy tundra owners with them.
Anyone have any thoughts? I really wish they'd have specs listed that I could compare. Like travel length, spring rate, valving. Am I missing something or is it mostly just marketing? Any suggestions would be much appreciated as I'd like to get this done early next week. Thanks for reading.
Anyways I've been reluctant to get fancy aftermarket parts as they usually need constant maintenance/replacement. Also rebuildable shocks take weeks to get back. It's hard for me to have more than a day or two of downtime at any given moment. I know I need to just bite the bullet and spend some good money to improve the front end. I just want to make the right decision. These Tundras don't have much aftermarket support so I guess that makes the decision making a bit easier.
Upper Control Arms:
As far as I know for upper control arms my only two options are Camburg Uni-ball UCAs or Light Racing UCAs. I'm a little biased on this decision and want to go with LR. I've had the Camburg UCAs on my past 2wd Tundra and just couldn't keep them maintained. I spent so much time cleaning them and using the dry lube and they'd still squeak like crazy. Then again I have zero experience with the Light Racing product. The covered ball join vs the Uniball heim joint seems like it could prove to be a more reliable option. Any opinions are much appreciated.
Coilovers
Now for shocks am I right to be considering the offerings from Icon, Fox, King, Toyotec? Any other I should consider? What specs can I look up for these shocks? I know valving and spring rate is important on a per vehicle basis but I can't seem to find any relevant specs other than just blatant marketing.
Icon: So many people rave about their Icons. They look like a well built shock and I really like the idea of their neoprene covers. From what I gather they're a shock designed for offroad racing. Super high speed travel rather than a typical overland vehicle that would be taking things slow. Is it correct to assume the ride will be more stiff? Aren't they designed to take high speed bumps really well but traveling at slow speeds on rough terrain be outside their real advantage?
King and Fox: I don't see many people with these two brands. I'm having a hard time finding people first hand experience with them and the Tundra. But both seem like top tier manufactures of shocks though.
Toyotec: I'm currently leaning towards Toyotec since they seem to be concentrated on Toyota specifically. ToyTec's BOSS front coilover seems like it might be the best fit for the truck. Says it's valved specifically for the Tundra (I would think the Bilsteins would be too?). I've read a few happy tundra owners with them.
Anyone have any thoughts? I really wish they'd have specs listed that I could compare. Like travel length, spring rate, valving. Am I missing something or is it mostly just marketing? Any suggestions would be much appreciated as I'd like to get this done early next week. Thanks for reading.