Suspension rebuild project, continued.
All New bushings and ball joints installed in the refurbed LCA’s.
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My rebuilt JBA adjust a struts arrived. A company called Wheel Every Weekend did the work in California! Ian and Brittany, the owners, were great to deal with, and their work is amazing.
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WEW is a licensed Bilstein shock rebuilder, and they redid mine and even tig welded in a schrader valve to recharge the Nitogen and make it easier to rebuild them next time around.
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The springs are new Eibach coilover springs because the old ones from 2012 looked and acted tired. JBA’s original equipment was a custom variable rate spring, so on WEW and JBA’s recommendations I went with a main spring and a smaller tender spring on top of that to get a similar effect.
The shoulder bolts from the original kit linking the top plates to the shocks put up a fight and lost. The threads on the bolts and nuts were basically destroyed taking them off. I was able to source the exact same part at the local Ace Hardware.
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JBA Offroad sent me a brand new set of their upper control arms as a lifetime warranty replacement. They look awesome! They came with more modern greaseable bushings (my old ones were rubber) and brand new ball joints.
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JBA recommends opening up the UCA pockets on the Jeep to allow for more travel and reduce the chance of breaking an arm. A ball pein hammer and some spray paint did that job. [edit: Hammering works on the front pocket, but the rear pocket is beefier and requires a Dremel with a cutting wheel.]
Here are the new JBA UCA’s, refurbished LCA’s, and rebuilt JBA adjust a struts, installed. I will be tackling the knuckles, rotors, calipers, sway bar links, and tie rod ends next, so that I can get this thing on its wheels! I love having the shiny JBA red in the wheel wells.
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One more thing before I quit for the day: I put my rebuilt Rock Lizard sliders back on. I cut out some rusty parts and welded in new steel, which I documented in another thread. Nice to have those sliders on again both as steps to get in, and protection from Philadelphia automotive chaos. Oh yeah, and rocks.
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EDIT:
Ian and Brittany from Wheel Every Weekend asked me to post that unfortunately they can’t rebuild any more of the JBA Bilstein 7100 shocks like mine, because it took 8 hours to do my one set.
As someone who is married to a small business owner, I can totally understand that refurbishing this specific type of shock is not a cost effective use of their time.
I am grateful to be able to keep running my JBA adjust a struts and have them live another Jeep life. Thanks Ian and Brittany! — Lauren