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leaf springs

Discussion in 'Intermediate CJ-5/6/7/8' started by hawkte, Aug 24, 2008.

  1. hawkte

    hawkte rustbucket

    Ok you brainy fellas
    we all know that a 73 cj5 squirrels it's way down the highway. I have replaces a lot of steering parts including all four leaf springs plus added a sway bar. it has helped.... Butttt not enough should I put the shackle to the back of the front springs ? I've read it helps though I fail to see why? tell me oh wise gods of the ohio jeep will it and why?
    Thanks Tom:rofl:
     
  2. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    A '73 CJ-5 drives fine unless there's something wrong with it. How much lift?
     
  3. hawkte

    hawkte rustbucket

    one inch body and about two on new springs
     
  4. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Have you checked the caster?
     
  5. hawkte

    hawkte rustbucket

    Nope i did replace ball joints but really need tires before getting alingment checked

    What I was really hoping for was opinions on moving leaf spring shackels from front to rear. Does it help with control issues?
     
  6. bkd

    bkd Moderator Supreme Staff Member 2022 Sponsor

    there's lots of opinions on that...a search will provide plenty of reading
    Tim's point is the first I'd check....my caster was only 1* positive and keeping a straight line was impossible. I added shims that brought the caster to 5+* positive and it's two finger control now.
    Jim S.
     
  7. coby61

    coby61 Stupidiotic Member

    Make sure the front shackle is a quality thickness and the bolts and bushings are tight. I had this problem on the CJ6 when I put the lift on it and I found the front bushings in the frame were worn and the bolt was slightly undersized fro the hole. Fixed those and it was much improved over before.
     
  8. Posimoto

    Posimoto Hopeless JEEP Addict

    To answer your question. I felt a great improvement in handling with the shackle reversal and it's much better on the rocky trails we have here. It really smooths out the bumps. Things to consider though are: the front end tends to dip a little more when braking hard, and you need to allow for more compression in the front driveshaft because as the axle moves up, it also moves to the rear and compresses the driveshaft. With the shackles in front, in the stock position, the axle moves forward when it moves up and makes the driveshaft extend. If you stand in front of your Jeep and have someone move the steering wheel back and forth you'll notice the bottoms of the shackles flexing left and right. The longer your shackles are the worse it is. They don't do that on a reversal. I think that's where a lot of the improvement comes from. .
     
    Last edited: Aug 25, 2008
  9. hawkte

    hawkte rustbucket

    At Last a vote!!!! and a reason!!! Thankyou!!!
    any one else?