โJul-04-2018 02:49 PM
โJul-07-2018 05:45 AM
tlowe43q wrote:
I see Bilsteins are in 4600 or 5100 .... 4600? Diferences?
โJul-06-2018 07:21 PM
tlowe43q wrote:
2016 GMC Denali 3500 Dually, crew cab, long bed, duramax with 2017 Host Mammoth. Already has airbags and Stable loads (upper and lower). Air bags keep the rear sag to a minimum. The problem is expansion joints and the wonderful dips the โengineersโ have left us. The truck seems to leap, so Iโm assuming this is what is known as a rebound issue. I imagine that the truck is compressing into the overloads as designed, but hopping back out.
Do I need front and rear shocks? Bilsteins? Rancho? Some post seems to indicate that the nose (front shocks) may be issue ...
How does one learn the wheel weight capacity? My inner rears are steel (i think) and the fronts and outer rears are (what looks like) polished aluminum. Stock tires are little 17 inchers.
โJul-06-2018 06:39 PM
tlowe43q wrote:
I see Bilsteins are in 4600 or 5100 .... 4600? Diferences?
โJul-06-2018 11:38 AM
โJul-06-2018 09:15 AM
โJul-06-2018 06:22 AM
โJul-05-2018 11:57 AM
tlowe43q wrote:
Unfortunately, I do not know how much diesel was on board, nor how much water in the camper, but front axle was 4580 and rear was 9560 vs. (what I seem to find for max loads of 5600/9750). Tires are max load 3085 single/ 2835 dual so I believe I should be running 59+ (59.4) front and 67+ (67.4) rear. Front tread wear seems to indicate underinflation (OR a GMC steering wear characteristic???).
I have been experimenting with the Air bags - leveling (returning to empty height, actually) seems to take 60-80.
โJul-05-2018 07:11 AM
โJul-05-2018 05:56 AM
โJul-04-2018 05:13 PM
โJul-04-2018 04:28 PM
โJul-04-2018 03:00 PM