blown327chevy
New Member
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2023
- Messages
- 8
- Reaction score
- 22
New guy here with some questions I'm hoping some of the guys who've been around can help with. Great site btw. Lots of great info.
Guess a little background about what I have/what I aim to do with it would be appropriate. I have an 06 that I bought as a junk car due to a fairly minor front end collision. It ran great and 4x4 worked so I decided to keep it as a cheap trail rig. I welded the rear diff, removed the sway bars, fabbed some skid plates and a snorkle and beat it all summer long with zero problems. Little beast was surprisingly capable but suffered in the ground clearance department badly. For the last time out I decided to install a crappy ebay type bolt on lift (1.75" front spacer, 1.5" rear) that I had removed from another and some 255/75/17 mud terrains I had laying around on the otherwise stock 130k suspension. It was much more capable and ran around all day until the front driveshaft left the chat and ended my day. However things were not happy. Lots of banging around from the rear shocks which I expected but quite a bit of noise up front as well.
Now that it's getting nice again I pulled it out the other day and stuck a new front driveshaft in it. Upon doing so I noticed the cv shafts bind pretty good when the suspension is unloaded, enough so that the front axle bounces with the wheels pointed straight. I have decided to properly lift it and will be going with 790 fronts (will have an 85 pound winch and around 150 or so pounds of bumper) 948 rears and 4600s on all 4 corners. My main question is will my cv shafts be happy under off-road conditions with this setup? I want them to live for more than one trip...lol. Unfortunately I don't have current height info because it currently has no front fenders or flares but I plan on reinstalling them this weekend for a reference measurement. Any help would be appreciated and thanks in advance!
Guess a little background about what I have/what I aim to do with it would be appropriate. I have an 06 that I bought as a junk car due to a fairly minor front end collision. It ran great and 4x4 worked so I decided to keep it as a cheap trail rig. I welded the rear diff, removed the sway bars, fabbed some skid plates and a snorkle and beat it all summer long with zero problems. Little beast was surprisingly capable but suffered in the ground clearance department badly. For the last time out I decided to install a crappy ebay type bolt on lift (1.75" front spacer, 1.5" rear) that I had removed from another and some 255/75/17 mud terrains I had laying around on the otherwise stock 130k suspension. It was much more capable and ran around all day until the front driveshaft left the chat and ended my day. However things were not happy. Lots of banging around from the rear shocks which I expected but quite a bit of noise up front as well.
Now that it's getting nice again I pulled it out the other day and stuck a new front driveshaft in it. Upon doing so I noticed the cv shafts bind pretty good when the suspension is unloaded, enough so that the front axle bounces with the wheels pointed straight. I have decided to properly lift it and will be going with 790 fronts (will have an 85 pound winch and around 150 or so pounds of bumper) 948 rears and 4600s on all 4 corners. My main question is will my cv shafts be happy under off-road conditions with this setup? I want them to live for more than one trip...lol. Unfortunately I don't have current height info because it currently has no front fenders or flares but I plan on reinstalling them this weekend for a reference measurement. Any help would be appreciated and thanks in advance!
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