Lowering a Hybrid

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

07Burb

GM fan for life
Staff member
Administrator
Supporting Member
Joined
Jan 3, 2011
Posts
50,325
Reaction score
17,046
Oh come on soulsea!!! Bag that thang and lay frame! :D
 

THE YETI

Director of Operations
Supporting Member
Joined
Apr 29, 2009
Posts
25,690
Reaction score
10,700
Location
South FL
Oh come on soulsea!!! Bag that thang and lay frame! :D

i think Hybrids have recycled aluminum frames to keep in tact with that "green" theme, would throw some INSANE sparks!!!




jk... srs :chicken:
 

07Burb

GM fan for life
Staff member
Administrator
Supporting Member
Joined
Jan 3, 2011
Posts
50,325
Reaction score
17,046
Sounds cool enough to me :)
 

soulsea

Staff member
Administrator
Supporting Member
Joined
Feb 19, 2011
Posts
11,806
Reaction score
667,056
Location
Bar
you could always donate that to the Wilwood 4-piston Rear Brake Caliper Coalition... just sayin.

Unfortunately that money has been appropriated to the Hybrid Warranty Coalition Fund ... if there's anything left over I'm all over the pretty brake fund.

:Handshake:
 

cendres

TYF Newbie
Joined
Oct 5, 2010
Posts
13
Reaction score
0
Location
AV MN
Sure ... it's 34" on both rears and 33.5" on both fronts.

With that ride height (but not knowing your tire height), I bet the crappy ride is due to the rear bumpstops, as in they need to go away. Actually, that's not quite true. You should cut the entire bracket off the frame rails as shown elsewhere on this forum.

I understand that you aren't doing your own install work, so if the shop that did the install can't/won't handle this, try looking for a body shop that does a lot of custom work. A Sawzall, cut-off wheel and an air chisel make it fairly painless. They'll look at you cross-wise when you tell them what you want done, but once they look closely at it, they'll get it.

Losing these bumpstops will make a tremendous improvement in ride quality. My 2007 2WD Tahoe is at 31.75" front, 33.25" rear on stock-size 275/55/20s and it rides fantastic. I carried about 600 pounds of cargo in it yesterday, and no bottoming at all.

I'll do a bit of a write-up on it soon. I haven't taken decent photos yet, but I should have my wheels on it in the next day or two.

CE
 

07Burb

GM fan for life
Staff member
Administrator
Supporting Member
Joined
Jan 3, 2011
Posts
50,325
Reaction score
17,046
i use a 8 inch sawzall blade and cut along the frame rail takes 5 minutes per side

I assume that then you back and "box in" what was just cut out?
 

Forum statistics

Threads
132,092
Posts
1,862,322
Members
96,565
Latest member
Aaron b
Top