WalterMitty
Full Access Member
I'll add 2¢ here not because I consider myself an expert but because I learned something the hard way that in hindsight probably should have been common sense; but I missed it.
The torsion bars do not control the limits of suspension travel. You can adjust them to raise or lower the relative position of the front end, but the parts that actually stop wheel travel are unaffected.
I put 285's on my 1996 and had no rubbing issues under normal driving conditions. When I finally got the truck into a situation that pinned the right front "A" arm against the stop, I had a problem. Unknown to me (I should have checked) the stock bump stop was blown out and did not stop wheel travel where it should have. So I put the tire into the wheel well, cut the tire and tweaked the metal.
If you have a rubbing issue that you "solve" by adjusting torsion bars, be prepared to have it return with a vengeance on that day you put the suspension at the limit. In my experience that situation may not permit you to do anything but drag on through hoping the tire doesn't puncture or turn the fender lip inside out.
I apologize in advance if this is painfully obvious and I'm just a moron for not knowing it, but it took me several days to do a post mortem and find the root cause of the problem.
.
The torsion bars do not control the limits of suspension travel. You can adjust them to raise or lower the relative position of the front end, but the parts that actually stop wheel travel are unaffected.
I put 285's on my 1996 and had no rubbing issues under normal driving conditions. When I finally got the truck into a situation that pinned the right front "A" arm against the stop, I had a problem. Unknown to me (I should have checked) the stock bump stop was blown out and did not stop wheel travel where it should have. So I put the tire into the wheel well, cut the tire and tweaked the metal.
If you have a rubbing issue that you "solve" by adjusting torsion bars, be prepared to have it return with a vengeance on that day you put the suspension at the limit. In my experience that situation may not permit you to do anything but drag on through hoping the tire doesn't puncture or turn the fender lip inside out.
I apologize in advance if this is painfully obvious and I'm just a moron for not knowing it, but it took me several days to do a post mortem and find the root cause of the problem.
.