gwittman
Adventurer
Hi Scott, I am trying to wrap my head around your statement of losing compression travel when lifting with torsion bars. Maybe I am misunderstanding what you are saying but my understanding of the way the torsion suspension works would result in increased compression travel after a torsion bar lift. My definition of compression is when the wheel is pushed upward relative to the chassis. Lifting with the torsion bar should reduce the extension travel (wheel moves down relative to the chassis) due to the shock hitting the extension stop easier. Lifting with the torsion bar should put more stress on the bar because it will twist more due to the increased compression travel.
Adjusting ride height with the torsion bar does not change the overall travel limit points of the suspension, it just changes the neutral position of the suspension. If you raise it, you are closer to the extension limit. If you lower it, you are closer to the compression limit. I think you can get more travel by installing shocks that have more extension travel but that could stress the some of the suspension components resulting in early failure. The CV joints may not like that either.
Let me know if I am misunderstanding something about the torsion bar suspension or your understanding of it.
Adjusting ride height with the torsion bar does not change the overall travel limit points of the suspension, it just changes the neutral position of the suspension. If you raise it, you are closer to the extension limit. If you lower it, you are closer to the compression limit. I think you can get more travel by installing shocks that have more extension travel but that could stress the some of the suspension components resulting in early failure. The CV joints may not like that either.
Let me know if I am misunderstanding something about the torsion bar suspension or your understanding of it.