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Never heard of one losing that amount in that length of time. My first set of 927s lasted 100,000 miles and didn't sag half that amount and that was with an ARB out front2 years with this lift, began to settle after about 8 months. Right now, approx. 1-1/2 to 1-3/4 lost. Only additional weight in the front is a Westin bull bar. It's a JBA 3-1/2 Econo lift, so it already has a 1/4 top plate and 3/8 clevis rings.
That is just pulling the tires in, like any IFS, has nothing to do with springs etcI'm not sure what the initial height was when installed but if I jack up the front for several hours and allow the suspension to extend, when I lower it back down the front and rear sit level but will gradually settle back down about 1-1/2" over the next couple of days.
Even if it's not driven and sits in the same spot for those days?That is just pulling the tires in, like any IFS, has nothing to do with springs etc
LOL yes, until moved it will sit that wayEven if it's not driven and sits in the same spot for those days?
My wife had a '16 Jeep Compass and we put a 2 inch lift on it. After I got the front on and set it down, it was more of a 4-5 inch lift. Got the rear done and same thing. After a short 1-2 mile trip it settled down to the 2 inch lift. Point being, as previously said, after unloading the suspension, the vehicle will sit higher until it settles down. Even my '09 Mazda 3 does it.
Way easier for most of us to process if you measure from the center of the wheel to the bottom edge of the flare.
Means nothing at allPics after the suspension settles. Measurements taken from concrete driveway.
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