All things will vibrate from some sort of input. When the input harmonic matches the thingโs natural harmonic and if the input continues to input, the thing will vibrate more within the same frequency.
Your running over the expansion joints sets up an input to your truck. Your speed dictates the frequency of the input to your TV.
Slowing down and/or speeding up will change the input frequency to your truck.
As for you trucks harmonic...the things that are part or contribute to its harmonic are the tires, suspension (shocks, bushing, shocks, architecture, etc), the body bushings to frame and a big ETC.
The Kelderman suspension you mention changes the suspension architecture and the air bags adjust what the inputโs amplitude & suspension response...AKA tunes the suspension harmonic
Other than changing your speed, changing the tire PSI changes its harmonics, change the shocks and can go either way...more or less dampening, and everything else in that food chain.
Easiest and lowest cost is changing your speed...
-Ben
Picture of my rig1996 GMC SLT Suburban 3/4 ton K3500/7.4L/4:1/+150Kmiles orig owner...
1980 Chevy Silverado C10/long bed/"BUILT" 5.7L/3:73/1 ton helper springs/+329Kmiles, bought it from dad...
1998 Mazda B2500 (1/2 ton) pickup, 2nd owner...
Praise Dyno Brake equiped and all have "nose bleed" braking!
Previous trucks/offroaders: 40's Jeep restored in mid 60's / 69 DuneBuggy (approx +1K lb: VW pan/200hpCorvair: eng, cam, dual carb'w velocity stacks'n 18" runners, 4spd transaxle) made myself from ground up / 1970 Toyota FJ40 / 1973 K5 Blazer (2dr Tahoe, 1 ton axles front/rear, +255K miles when sold it)...
Sold the boat (looking for another): Trophy with twin 150's...
51 cylinders in household, what's yours?...