โFeb-02-2015 07:50 AM
โFeb-04-2015 07:35 AM
โFeb-04-2015 07:30 AM
โFeb-04-2015 07:15 AM
โFeb-03-2015 11:31 AM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
The toad has independent rear suspension. The rear sway bar has done ZERO to degrade the handling of the car hitting deep Mexican grade one wheel potholes. With a solid axle and leaf spring rear end the non-effect of torsional flex applied to the other side is even less if that means anything.
โFeb-03-2015 11:09 AM
j-d wrote:
The broken sway bars I've seen, have incorporated tubing and various welds to form what looks at first glance like a solid bar. I have not seen a broken solid bar.
My guess is that the cracks mean that your bar is not acting as a torsion spring any more. In other words, not doing what it was designed to do. That something is prevent a rolling movement by transferring weight to the side that would sway up.
I did the add-a-leaf fix on our first Class C. It stopped the swaying and bottoming the coach had when we bought it. It did, however, raise the rear above level relative to the front. I'm pretty sure our front springs were sagged too, just never changed them. I'd suspect your fronts, as well as rears, are tired out.
My opinion, and I say it realizing others may disagree, adding a gizmo like air shocks, shocks with coil springs over them, booster springs, coil spring spacers, etc etc aren't long term solutions. A failed spring needs a new spring.
โFeb-03-2015 11:01 AM
โFeb-03-2015 10:44 AM
โFeb-03-2015 09:41 AM
โFeb-03-2015 08:43 AM
โFeb-03-2015 07:16 AM
Naio wrote:
He reminded me of something I had forgotten to tell y'all, which is the van's tendency to set up an oscillation after it goes over a bump or a dip. It feels like the road goes up and down and up and down... but really it was just one bump and the van doing the rest on its own. This is with new, stiff shocks. It's especially bad if the bump is hit while cornering.
โFeb-02-2015 07:53 PM
โFeb-02-2015 06:27 PM
โFeb-02-2015 05:52 PM
โFeb-02-2015 05:52 PM