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Shock resitance, compression vs expanded.

frederick_w
Explorer
Explorer
I just bought Monroe magnum gas shocks for my MH.

It takes 50% less resistance to compress shock downward compared to extending (pulling up) the shock.

Perhaps that's normal for motor home shocks. It seems there should be at least 75 %.

Thanks in advance.
4 REPLIES 4

tatest
Explorer II
Explorer II
Depending on the application, shocks can be anywhere between 50-50 and 90-10, with the greater damping on rebound. Shocks stiff on compression make for a harsher ride, extension damping serves to limit oscillation and control the unsprung weight.

The only exception I know about was a drag racing front shock that served to hold the front end up for weight transfer to the rear, which had almost no damping on extension and was very slow to come back down.
Tom Test
Itasca Spirit 29B

_40Fan
Explorer
Explorer
pronstar wrote:
Compression damping, and rebound damping, won't be the same.


For a cheap off the counter shock. The money that it would take to make it do what you would want to would scare away 99% of the people out there.
2013 Arctic Fox 22GQ
2011 Ram 2500 CC LB CTD G56 3.42 Mineral Gray

pronstar
Explorer
Explorer
Compression damping, and rebound damping, won't be the same.
'07 Ram 5.9 QC/LB SRW
Full Carli Suspension
35" Toyo's | 4.56 | PacBrake


2009 Cyclone 3950 | B&W Turnover Ball & Companion | TrailAire | Duravis R250s

Home_Skillet
Explorer II
Explorer II
Shocks are for controlling suspension rebound.
So, they are working correctly.
2005 Gulf Stream Conquest 31ft
BigFoot Levelers,TST in tire TPMS,Bilstein Shocks,Trans temp guage,Lowrace iWAY