madcratebuilder
New member
The DSSV are very easy to depress because they use a very low gas pressure, 30-40 psi vs 100+ psi on Kings.That's the way of the Internet!
I do agree with you on almost everything, the factory multimatic shocks are great for faster forest roads, and street driving, but a set of rancho shocks would likely do the same. It's not until the whoops that you start seeing heat related failure as the oil heats up. While I have only heard/seen about them on 2019 and older shocks, it's still going to be an issue with such a small reservoir of fluid.
The real issues come with seal failure. Take mine for example, 25k on the odometer and I already have a shock in the rear that doesn't rebound. Who knows how long it's been that way. A friend (2018 ZR2) was able to compress his shock up and down with two fingers after the same amount of miles. There's a plethora of failures on the IG but who knows what their driving situations are like. Most of them are the rear shocks leaking fluid.
It's just my opinion, but I would be ready to replace the shocks after 30k-50k. At $1500/ea last I checked, it makes more sense to go King/Radflo/etc. as long as you're willing to take time and tune them yourself. The unfortunate truth is that there's no shock out there that is perfect for every situation all the time.
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The DSSV's are $500 each, not $1500. The $1500 is a dealer/warranty price.
Kings need regular rebuilds and in the long run can cost the same as replacing DSSV's every 50K.
I've only driven one truck with Kings, I felt it was very stiff, I'm sure tuning could correct that.