Weldangrind
03-31-2009, 02:34 AM
The stock front shocks were ridiculously stiff and unadjustable; they belong on a dune buggy, IMHO.
I bought two 2006 Raptor 660 front shocks on eBay for $30. Upon receipt they were clearly too wide and too tall. I spent some time with the original shocks removed and the quad on jackstands to move the front suspension through the range and understand where bumpsteer might occur. For the unfamiliar, bumpsteer occurs because the tie rod and the lower control arm are different lengths, causing two different arcs. It happens in cars too. The trick is to keep the suspension within the range that bumpsteer doesn't occur. If the wheel is allowed to travel too high or too low, it will turn the wheel as well (generally when you hit a bump).
I marked the range that the control arms could safely travel within and then measured where the top of the new shock would end up. I then bought some rectangular tube that had the same inside width as the width of the top of the shock. I diced up the tube, welded it in place and then created a bridge to connect the new mounts for added stiffness.
The lower control arms have two mounting holes to choose from. Because of the girth of the new shock, I had to choose the inside hole and I had to remove one mounting plate and re-weld it a little further apart. After I was satisfied, I made caps for the upper mounts, finish-welded everything and painted it.
It's MHO that the new shocks will allow articulation without pounding the control arm bushings. Hopefully, everything will last a long time.
Check out the pics.
http://i158.photobucket.com/albums/t109/Weldangrind/SecondMockup.jpg
http://i158.photobucket.com/albums/t109/Weldangrind/MountFab.jpg
http://i158.photobucket.com/albums/t109/Weldangrind/LowerMountRemoval.jpg
http://i158.photobucket.com/albums/t109/Weldangrind/FinalMockupwithBridge-1.jpg
I bought two 2006 Raptor 660 front shocks on eBay for $30. Upon receipt they were clearly too wide and too tall. I spent some time with the original shocks removed and the quad on jackstands to move the front suspension through the range and understand where bumpsteer might occur. For the unfamiliar, bumpsteer occurs because the tie rod and the lower control arm are different lengths, causing two different arcs. It happens in cars too. The trick is to keep the suspension within the range that bumpsteer doesn't occur. If the wheel is allowed to travel too high or too low, it will turn the wheel as well (generally when you hit a bump).
I marked the range that the control arms could safely travel within and then measured where the top of the new shock would end up. I then bought some rectangular tube that had the same inside width as the width of the top of the shock. I diced up the tube, welded it in place and then created a bridge to connect the new mounts for added stiffness.
The lower control arms have two mounting holes to choose from. Because of the girth of the new shock, I had to choose the inside hole and I had to remove one mounting plate and re-weld it a little further apart. After I was satisfied, I made caps for the upper mounts, finish-welded everything and painted it.
It's MHO that the new shocks will allow articulation without pounding the control arm bushings. Hopefully, everything will last a long time.
Check out the pics.
http://i158.photobucket.com/albums/t109/Weldangrind/SecondMockup.jpg
http://i158.photobucket.com/albums/t109/Weldangrind/MountFab.jpg
http://i158.photobucket.com/albums/t109/Weldangrind/LowerMountRemoval.jpg
http://i158.photobucket.com/albums/t109/Weldangrind/FinalMockupwithBridge-1.jpg