| Re: front and rear shocker selection Chris
Make sure of the travel available by measuring the travel at the shock mounts, wheel travel is always more unless you have a strut suspension. A good starting point is to have the shock 40% compressed at ride height, most shock specs will give you compressed, extended, and mounting heights so that you nay be sure the shock has enough travel for the setup you have. Alos, keep in mind that the ride height setup will also reflect on what spring you might use, if the shock is compressed say 2 inches at ride height and you are using a 400# spring then the shock is already supporting 800# and may be too long for your application. Another factor is that some shocks require the spring be compressed at assembly, and this adds a certain amount of preload to the shock even before you reach ride height. Fineally since it is a given that your shocks are inboard of the actual wheel center, the suspension has leverage on the shock, travel will be less than actual wheel travel, and you need a higher spring rate to compensate for this, The "motion Ratio" will allow you to pretty closely calculate what spring rates you need, and with a little fiddling you can tune the suspension rather well.
Good Luck
Phil |