• Garage Projects

    The Lone Ranger – 60/14 Bolt swap – Moving the shocks out

    In the quest for better road manners, I went ahead and moved the rear shocks out as much as I could. The end result is a more stable ride, that didn’t limit the rear flex that much (who needs flex when you’ve got lockers anyway ). Unfortunately, it still didn’t cure my wheel vibe, but it did help calm it down quite a bit. I went from my original setup: To something like this: But that wound up limiting my…

  • Garage Projects

    The Lone Ranger – 60/14 Bolt swap – Shocking the Rear

    After killing my Rubicon Express shocks I had in the rear (I was accidentally using them as bump stops when I had a load in the bed ). I needed to swap something in that would help control the rear some and hopefully settle the sway down some. This wound up being a bit of a pain to get it dialed in but we got there. The shocks I’m are the same as what’s found on the Chevy/GMC 1500 2wd…

  • Garage Projects

    The Lone Ranger – 60/14 Bolt swap – Rear Shock Mounting V2.0

    Since I had the bed off to work on the exo, I took a look at the rear upper shock mounts. It turns out some dummy didn’t really set them up right, so with a load on the back of the truck , the shocks were acting as the bump stops (D’oh!). With the truck sitting static, I had about 2″ of shock up travel left (They were mounted vertical) . The problem is my bump stops allowed for 4″…

  • Garage Projects

    The Lone Ranger – 60/14 Bolt swap – Rear Shock Mounting

    The axle shock mounts came as a part of Ruff Stuff’s “Simple Dana 60/70″ swap kit. I made the upper mounts using the same 2” tube I had in the front: On the frame side, I used a piece of 2″x3″x1/4″ wall tube to go across the frame rails. Here it is tacked on checking the mounting locations: Burned home with some gussets: Shocks installed: