N-Trouble wrote:
goducks10 wrote:
JMO but if your 9000's are in good working condition then Bilstiens probably won't make enough of a difference. Sounds like you have some other issue causing the bounce. Maybe an air hitch would be money better spent.
True, but he first needs to determine IF the shocks are in good working condition...
My guess would be one or more of your rear shocks are bad. Rancho's these days aren't known for their durability, even true for the 9000s. I would first do a visual looking for any leaks then remove them, compress and see if they return to full length. If they don't, time to replace. And as others have mentioned go with Bilsteins.
How many PSI are you running in your bags?
Good catch on the bottoming out. I missed that part. Yeah if he's bottoming out with bags and 9000's then something's not right. I'd ditch the bags and go Timbrens. You can only drop a little with them. I run them on my 2500 with 1800lbs of pin. Not for anything more than a more stable ride. They sit 1" off the axle. When hitched up the rest right on the axle. So no bottoming out per say.
With that being said more air in the bags should work the same.
That 5er only has a 1445lb dry pin. Only 60lbs more than mine. Even if he maxed out that 5er he'd be at 1902lbs assuming that the pin to weight (16.4) ratio stays the same. Hard to imagine 1900lbs causing a 2500 to bottom out. I've towed my 5er with out the Timbrens and at 1800lbs on the pin it never came remotely close to bottoming out. Actually the ride is not much different than with the Timbrens.
Doubt he's loading 2795lbs (CCC) in it. 1500lbs is more likely. So the pin should be under 1900lbs.