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fiburns 08-12-2005 03:49 PM

05 F-150 air shocks
 
Hello, Does anyone know of air shocks for an 05 F-150 Supercab? Pulling heavy loads, the back drops down to much.

wandell 08-12-2005 03:52 PM

I wouldn't go with cheap air shocks. An air bag system would be a much better choice.

Colorado Osprey 08-12-2005 10:39 PM

+1 on airbags.

They fit between the frame and spring and only work when there is a heavy load. They won't effect the ride when empty and won't break off your shock mounts on a pot hole. Shocks and mounts are designed to stop spring oscillation not hold up a load. Air shocks are always a bad idea. :thumbsup:

fiburns 08-17-2005 08:04 PM

air bags
 
will air bags raise my truck any? or should I just get a lift kit?

wandell 08-17-2005 10:11 PM

If you want to raise your truck, get a lift kit. If you install airbags and inflate them to the point the suspension is topped out the truck will ride like crap.

Colorado Osprey 08-18-2005 12:04 AM


Originally Posted by fiburns
will air bags raise my truck any? or should I just get a lift kit?

The air bag goes between the rear leaf and the frame. It only comes into play as the frame is squished down by excessive weight. This means that the air bags have no adverse ride effect, unless....it is really weighed down and you have a lot of air in the bags like WENDELL said.

Lift kits usually do not increase weight capacity, actually most do the exact opposite, by using larger softer springs for more articulation of the suspension. Also by lifting, you raise the center of gravity of the truck making it more unstable, a no-no for heavy loading.

Good luck...get some air bags...... :thumbsup:

PS. if it's too far down check weights and don't exceed your GCVW.

GIJoeCam 08-18-2005 10:10 AM


Originally Posted by Colorado Osprey
Lift kits usually do not increase weight capacity,

Neither do airbags. Weight capacity isn't a function of the rear springs alone. You also have to take into account the weight rating of the rear axle and the GCWR. You can't exceed either one.

Airbags may reduce the squat of the rear end, but they don't allow you to increase the amount of weight your truck can handle.

-Joe

Colorado Osprey 08-18-2005 02:05 PM

Sorry I wasn't clear. I thought I covered that with the GCVW, thanks for clarifying GIJoecam.

GIJoeCam 08-18-2005 02:20 PM

I knew that's what you meant as I've heard your advice before....

For starters, before installing anything, take the rig over to a truck scale and weigh it with and without the trailer. Roll across the scales, get the weight, then park the trailer in the parking lot and roll the tow vehicle back across the scales. The differences in the numbers will tell you if the axle is near (or over) its limit to begin with. A severe squat is usually a pretty good sign it may be.

FWIW, I had a 300 lb tongue weight on my boat trailer (verified on the local truck scale). The back end squatted 2 inches exactly. For $10 bucks, it reassured me I wasn't overloading anything, and verified that I had a proper balance to the trailer.

-Joe


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