@UglyViking got it right, I meant run 35’s or 33’s on all 5 wheels, sure the “look” will be different but we’re talking function.
Also I think AEV have stopped offering re-gearing, but you should check. If you’re going to climb into places a smaller diameter is going to be easier on the drive train if you’re stuck with a 3.73. This is where Ford has Ram beat, more ratio’s choices standard and the cab choices.
Suspension, like an oil thread, will consume many pages.
So, you’ve discovered part 1 of the equation, slower is better, for both family and rig.
Part 2 is there is room for improvement, but to what?
Insert whatever brand rant with anecdotal evidence justifies said brand.
So how did I choose mine?
Firstly, camper on summer, off winter so need something that’s not brutal when unloaded.
Ran the AEV 5100 bilstiens for about 3 months with no camper (was being built) and slowly found their limits unloaded. Ride quality average at best.
Got the camper on, did 3 trips and discovered these things love having a load on, ride quality way better, shocks struggled to cope if the velocity was too high and my main method of adjusting ride quality was air pressure ( yay 37” and pro-cal so no low pressure alarm).
Added Sumo springs for a bit of load support and did a year with it. They helped but if you miss read the road ( think sudden drop off or side compression) we were suddenly on a roller coaster ride, not good, too taxing and on technical stuff , I was exhausted at days end.
So, new shocks time. Looked at all the usual suspects and tried to work through want we actually needed. That list was pretty short because I wasn’t planning on going any faster just needed more capability (read control). So if not going faster and the lift is good enough and we don’t want to redo the complete suspension a fox or king will be good enough and yes reservoir.
Note: AEV had just released their 8 series Bilstien, rang and inquired, nope got to wait and thinking about them, front would probably be fine they know the mass, rear loaded probably way off.
Did the front first, weight stays pretty much constant loaded or unloaded, change one thing at a time and understand it. Way better, room for improvement yep but good enough. Added a more flexible sway bar and was satisfied with the performance.
Did rear second but had them valved to cope with the weight variation, compromise so it’s better loaded.
Sumo went back in the box and I went airbag. Chose a big airbag so I could easily re level at lower PSI ( F = P x A ) and the ride and compliance ( read flex) would still be there. Bonus is they extend to 11” so no daystar needed and won’t rip out ( ours has 7” full cycle if we are lucky). 45 PSI gets me 2 1/2 to 3” of lift with the camper fully loaded and truck full of diesel.
Ran that setup for 3 yrs now with great success with manual fill. My son got a 2500 with rear air, after seeing how functional it is putting on his boat trailer, I added a 2 channel wireless one, recommended as it adds ride height, ride quantity, and leveling control in cab.
What would I do differently?
Rant on;
What I’m waiting for is the effing shock industry to get us into this century.
If I can have electronic control of my compression, rebound ,ride height and with programmable functions for different conditions with a 6 axis IMU that helps dictate/ control those functions in a motorcycle that ranges in price 15-30 grand… where the ******** are our options? Drop 80-90K on a truck and you get a shock that is none adjustable, springs that are so, so and that’s it… pathetic.
Rant off: