Ever hear the saying, "sometimes you eat the bear and sometimes the bear eats you"? Well ,my *** is raw, will get to that in a bit.
I already have a bunch of baseline info on my front suspension, but wanted more before tearing it down.
I broke out my trusty flex rig, straps and all. The high point plateaus at 19 1/4 inches.
First test was driven up as is, there was a 17" difference between the D/S and P/S bumper ends which puts it at a 18 degree angle (first truck
picture). At the rear receiver it was 17 degrees (1 degree of frame twist), with the D/S rear tire was 2 1/2" in the air. It rocked a bit while I
was getting in and out. NOT GOOD!
Next removed the front sway-bar, it was under so much load the last few threads of the mounting screws came out on an angle while on flat
ground!
Drove up, now there is a 15" difference up front, reduced the angle to only 17 degrees. Rear angle dropped 2 degrees to 15 (2 degrees twist)
and the D/S rear tire was now only 1 1/4" off the ground. Still NOT GOOD.
Did one more, still without the swaybar at the 16" level, top of the ramp. Now there is 12 1/2" difference, angle dropped to 14 degrees front,
13 degrees back (back to 1 degree twist) and now the D/S rear tire was finally back on the ground. At least its not a 3 wheeler anymore!
It's obvious that any obstacle over 16", the suspension is so tight the truck pivots/balances on the D/S front and P/S rear tire.
The culprit is the torsion bars, they were cranked within 2 threads of full to raise the front (not my work).
Now I know where I am, lets see where it ends up when done.
Started the teardown and this is where the bear enters. Used my balljoint press to compress the torsion bars, removed the adjusters and
released the pressure, not a problem. The keys were seized to the torsion bars. Ended up having to remove the cross brace with bars and all.
Chomp.
One side came out with the 5 pounder's 2nd blow, the other side not so much. Beat it with a 10 pounder about 30 times before it let go, only
hitting my hand once. My left thumb looks like a sausage. Chomp.
Started pulling a part the P/S suspension per Rough Country's instructions. Every cotter pin was rusted, broke etc. Chomp.
All the nuts and bolts seemed to have rusted to 1/2 mm or 1/64 to the nearest size. Some old worn sockets were hammered on to get them
off. Chomp.
One lower control arm bolt had to be put on before the front axle was installed at the factory. It came out so far and hit the axle flange. I
turned it so the flat was parallel to the flange and used a big bar to get some play out of the diff bushings WHILE driving it out. Fun stuff.
Chomp.
It was at this point I realized, I screwed up. I never took off the 35mm axle nut! Now I have a 100 lb blob of suspension parts that I cant get
leverage on to loosen the nut. Ripped off and put the whole mess in a vice, then using a ratchet strap,big plumber wrench, 4 foot pole and a
impact gun finally got it off. Chomp.
Everything pretty much fought me all day. Chomp.
Looking forward to doing the other side tomorrow, bringing bear spray!
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