AlpineBike
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Andrew
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2024
- Threads
- 3
- Messages
- 396
- Reaction score
- 467
- Location
- Waitsfield, VT
- Vehicle(s)
- 2024 Ranger Raptor
- Thread starter
- #31
Pipe down son…Because you’re obnoxiously posting about how anyone lifting their raptor is ruining the suspension and it must be for looking good in parking lots only.
Of course the manufacturer says adding modifications to their product is a bad idea. But they’re happy to do it if they get your money. So only they can profit.
Fox even told you most people won’t notice the difference. But no, it ruins everything.
Does moving the piston 1” higher really change the valving significantly? What if I haul 500 pounds in the bed? What if I carry passengers? Should I have custom shocks built for every weight configuration and suspension height I ever run? Better get a lifetime alignment plan and a bunch of extra hardware if I’m swapping shocks every time I use my truck.
Should I even start on the insistence that using a top mount spacer changes the performance? “It changes the suspension geometry!!!!!!” But having fox modify a factory shock with a perch collar doesn’t change it I guess.
But the stock height is perfect. O wait, ford lifted and added 35” tires to the factory race truck. And they change the shock valving for every course. But no, stock is perfect for everything.
Back to the pavement queen discussion. I have had my truck airborne with and without the collar lift. The only place I noticed any difference in ride is on pavement, right after installing the collars. How often is the piston just sitting at “stock ride height” while running off road?
Ok, I’m finished ranting now. If you don’t believe lifting your truck is a good idea, simply don’t do it. But insisting everyone that does is ruining their suspension is a bit much.
Ford probably doesn’t think I should tune my truck either, it will destroy the drivetrain. Unless they release a tune, then its perfectly ok.
I don’t recall saying anywhere that lifting/leveling this truck is “ruining your suspension”.
I simply stated that the shocks won’t perform how they are designed. And that is an undeniable fact.
All of these rationalizations about “only lifting it a little bit won’t affect it” are simply that. You’re own rationalizations…
Again I say, if you don’t believe me call Fox yourselves. But don’t start making statements about how you are smarter than the Fox/Ford factory off-road engineers. Cuz you ain’t and I ain’t!
And yes, I did confirm that the factory trucks that competed in the Baja and those other various races had their shocks internally reconfigured for the change in ride height!
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