iamdub
Full Access Member
Yeah I don't know what happen with that I ordered a set of KYB quick struts and these things were almost a size and a half bigger than the stock assembly. I think they May be riding like heavy duty. If I go with 2 inch lowering struts do I put them back with the stock coil spring and install my stock spindle?
The physical size doesn't really mean much unless you mean the strut body is longer, which would mean it would have that much less stroke than the stock setup which would mean it would bottom out that much sooner. The lowering strut just has the seat that the coil spring sits on located lower on the strut body. They should also be sized bit shorter so they don't bottom out 2" sooner. So, you would put your stock coils on them. This would maintain the stock load capacity and should be near stock ride quality, depending on how the struts are valved/tuned.
The struts would drop it 2". Running the struts with the spindles would net a 4" drop. Spindles alone would net a 2" drop but have no affect on anything else- load capacity and ride quality should remain the same because spindles don't change spring rate nor do they alter any other suspension geometries as far as amount of travel so the shocks (struts) should have just as much travel as they did originally. If you keep the spindles and put your stock struts back on, it should ride just as it did when completely stock.
Those KYB Quick Struts- they are a new strut and coil spring already together? If so, then that may be where the firm ride in the front is coming from. The springs may be heavier-duty than your stock ones which would make for a firmer ride and the strut valving may be firmer. Maybe you accidentally ordered or they accidentally sent you struts and coils for an HD truck?
Either way, I think this is where your rough ride in the front is coming from. The rough ride in the back is probably from the same firmly-valved shocks and maybe from the axle bottoming out on the bump stop brackets.