Forum Discussion

Raist11's avatar
Raist11
Explorer
Jun 26, 2015

Front shock replacement tips?

I've done the search but can't find anything concrete to my problem. I hate to have a second open thread but while I'm going my brakes I figured I'd replace the front shocks.

It's a 1990 Triple E Ford F53 chassis. It is going to be a serious pain in the but to get the top bolts loose. My problem is the new shocks are strapped at about 18" long. The distance between the top mount and bottom is about 21". I can't see myself being able to compress the leaf springs another 3-4" to be able to install these shocks with the strap on them.

My thought is to cut the strap, let them extend. Then mount the top hole and then use a 2x4 to pry the shock up into the bottom mount. I've gone by the part numbers listed on RockAuto and they were right on the calipers so I figure they must be the right shocks.

I've done automotive shocks before on my Jeep, that's easy. This, is an entirely different animal. Thanks in advance for any tips, hints, suggestions and even the polite point and laugh is okay.
  • I installed Monroe Gas Shocks on my '97 F53, by myself, and I'm 76 years old. Those shocks are not as difficult to compress as some folks claim.
  • Dale.Traveling wrote:
    I'm going to guess you have yourself a set of gas charged shocks. The gas will extend them slowly once you cut the strap. Without the strap they would need a bigger box. The strap costs less than the box. Holding them in your hand they are not that hard to collapse but under the coach the angles are not good for leverage. 2 x 4 should work without much of a problem. I used a floor jack. Easy job on my rig.

    You could also install them still strapped. Bolt the top in place, cut the strap. Once the low whole lines up quickly slip the bolt in place. Or have a bottle or scissor jack in place as a landing pad as the shock extends.


    Excellent, thanks. I wondered how quickly they would extend. Yes, they're Monroe gas charged shocks. Some info I read implied it was impossible to compress by hand. I really couldn't imagine they would be, but I've never installed a shock this size before.

    Now just to pick the appropriate tools to make this easier. I took a stab at it this afternoon but a regular 1 1/8th wrench wasn't enough to cut it. Time to buy a new breaker bar I think. :)
  • I'm going to guess you have yourself a set of gas charged shocks. The gas will extend them slowly once you cut the strap. Without the strap they would need a bigger box. The strap costs less than the box. Holding them in your hand they are not that hard to collapse but under the coach the angles are not good for leverage. 2 x 4 should work without much of a problem. I used a floor jack. Easy job on my rig.

    You could also install them still strapped. Bolt the top in place, cut the strap. Once the low whole lines up quickly slip the bolt in place. Or have a bottle or scissor jack in place as a landing pad as the shock extends.
  • In hindsight, perhaps this should have been posted in Projects and Upgrades, although it is a repair.. my apologies.