Coilover carnage!
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AFP coilovers held up really well, much better than I ever expected them to with all the torture I have put them through. Over a 1,000miles of Death Valley trails this spring was enough to discourage all of my off-roading buddies to stop coming out with me because the damage to their trucks was way more than they ever expected, all the while the Sub held up more or less OK.
After the coil shear destroyed my drivers side coilover I started to hear some sounds from the front suspension that I did not particularly like so I pulled the coilovers out, temporarily replaced the torsion bars and in the process of re-creating a new front end: new ball joints, bushings, hubs, brakes and longer coilover setup.
Here is the damage that was done with 1,200# coils, QA1 DS401 shocks and AFT brackets during my six months of blasting through the desert at mach 10.
Upper brackets held up really good, only some cosmetic paint chips and wear from the bolts. Drivers side bracket is on the left, passenger side bracket is on the right.
Another angle of the wear. AFP's welds are pretty stout and if I was not upgrading to longer travel I would keep this setup but weld the brackets in addition to the bolts.
1/4" steel is the key here, brackets would not have lasted or survived if 3/16" steel were to have been used. BTW top brackets and mounting bolts are for sale, PM me if you are interested. I have no use for them since I am in the process of making new upper brackets.
Lower baskets did not do nearly as well. Passenger side bracket on left and drivers side bracket on the right.
Paint chips and cosmetic wear and tear in this pic.
Passenger bracket took a beating on the left, with the centering cross bar bent. Drivers side is not as bad even though that was the side that had the catastrophic coil bind failure a two months ago.
Overall AFT coilover brackets have stood up to my unnecessarily harsh abuse and I will be keeping the lower brackets for my new coilover setup. Upper brackets did way better than the lower however I will not be using them anymore and if anyone wants them they are for sale with mounting bolts, PM me. QA1 shocks on the other hand did not do as well, mostly due to user error while blasting through the desert until something finally broke.
Drivers side DS401 shock that sheared in Death Valley.
For the money QA1 is pretty darn good, however their customer service and warranty is absolutely horrid, I contacted them several times and two months later have not had a response. The product is decent but expect to purchase new ones even in an event of a catastrophic failure since QA1 does not respond to emails or phone calls.
This is the replacement drivers side DS401 shock that has been on for two months. I have a 1" QA1 bump stop and tall top hats.
Other side of the new drivers side shock that has been on for two months. Even with the bump stop and tallest top hats that QA1 makes the angles of the shock travel relative to the attachment point on the lower control arm and the top bracket the shock body still rubs on the top hat.
Passenger shock after 6 months, not too bad however I still managed to destroy the metal bearing, which must have been a defective product to start with.
Bearing is so loose that light shines through it. Not sure how that happened, but I did drive the truck pretty hard.
Top of the passenger shock after 6 months. Top hat was rubbing on the shock body despite the bump stop. So that's a 1,200# coil over 4", 4,800# per side, or 9,800# of load on the front end of a 6,000lbs truck. I drove the crap out of it. So I either need to slow way down, get firmer coils, increase the travel or all of the above.
Other side of the passenger side shock body after 6 months. notice the threads on the bolt have silver aluminum residue. That's because the impact from the abuse twisted the threads inside the top shock eyelet and when removed the threads seized and had to be forced off.
Inside of the passenger eyelet after 6 months of abuse.
This is what you can expect if you run the AFP coilover brackets at 100% for six months. Under everyday driving this setup is phenomenal and should provide years of trouble free operation. Street driving and drag racing will not come anywhere close to the off-road abuse I put this setup through. Most reading this and considering AFT coilover conversion for off-road will not be disappointed. I would recommend 1,000# coils for a daily driver and 1,200# coils for at least 50% off road use. I am keeping the lower brackets for my future setup. However if anyone wants the upper brackets with mounting bolts, 1,000# coils or 1,200# coils, they are for sale.
Bottom line, one week with the torsion bars in the the truck and I already miss the coilovers especially when I make turns and fear for my life with the cranked torsion bar cause excessive pitch, yaw and body roll.
Stay tuned for more shenanigans!