• Welcome Visitor! Please take a few seconds and Register for our forum. Even if you don't want to post, you can still 'Like' and react to posts.

cheap lift question


n_bannerman

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 25, 2008
Messages
384
City
Walla Walla, Washington
Vehicle Year
1986
Transmission
Manual
how much lift would i be able to get out of a 88 ranger super cab 4x4 with a 2.9 if i got some springs from a 4.0l model? im looking at going to 245/75r16's and am going to do some fender cutting so i can lift as little as possible.
 
You probably will get between .5" and 1". I got 1" on my BII when I put 4.0 Supercab springs in it.
 
get them from a 4 door explorer since your 2.9l weighs the same as a 4.0l.
 
get them from a 4 door explorer since your 2.9l weighs the same as a 4.0l.
The 4.0 Explorer springs will lift the same as the 4.0 Ranger extended cab springs; they have the same spring rate.
 
The 4.0 Explorer springs will lift the same as the 4.0 Ranger extended cab springs; they have the same spring rate.
spring rate and height are the two variables and ford had a few different applications.his truck is about the same weight as a 4.0l truck i don't see why they would put a stiffer spring in it.the 4 door ex is the heaviest rbv on the other hand.the 2 door sport probably has the same springs as the super cab v-6
 
His supercab weighs no more than my BII does; 4.0 Ranger supercab springs will lift the SAME as the 4 door Explorer springs which is about 1".
 
Get leveling coils or a coil spacer, that would be the cheapest route
 
Ummm...

A Ranger Supercab is EASILY 500lbs heavier on the frontend than a BII.
 
My truck weighs 2220 on the front, and 1550 on the back. total 3770 with nothing in it and afull tank.

I have a 40 lb brushguard on the front, the rest of my trucks specs are in my sig. This is from a junkyard scale so its pretty accurate. If anyone took a b 2 or exploreer to a scap yard or something tehy should put there weights down so we can see actual differences in wt, not what people assume they are.
 
On one of those roadside scales that semi trucks use, my Ranger weighed 3050lbs on the front axle, and 1900 on the rear (me & one passenger inside, about 400lbs total).
That same scale said my BII weighed 2400 -+ 25lbs for both ends (near even balance).

It seems that scale is calibrated quite a bit on the high side, although it still clearly showed how much heavier the Ranger is (and mine's not even a Supercab, but does have a winch and dual batteries under the hood).
 
I never had rubbing wiht my setup no cutting the fender eather, spacer on the front adn blocks in back thats all i got. 4x4 junkie your truck seems real heavy, alsomt 5K on a ranger? Wow i had some 3/4 tons about that weight.:beer:
 
Last edited:
cool it looks like i may need to just cut the little 1" flat piece off the edge of the flare to make them fit and maybe at the bottoms a little bit more.
 
I never had rubbing wiht my setup no cutting the fender eather, spacer on the front adn blocks in back thats all i got. 4x4 junkie your truck seems real heavy, alsomt 5K on a ranger? Wow i had some 3/4 tons about that weight.:beer:

Like I mentioned, I think that scale was calibrated wrong (or isn't as accurate at those weights), I posted those figures just to show that the Ranger's frontend weight is indeed MUCH more than that of a BII.

I think the actual weights at the time I weighed them were closer to 2700lbs front, 1700 rear (Ranger)... 1950lbs front & rear (BII).
 

Sponsored Ad


Sponsored Ad

TRS Events

Member & Vendor Upgrades

For a small yearly donation, you can support this forum and receive a 'Supporting Member' banner, or become a 'Supporting Vendor' and promote your products here. Click the banner to find out how.

Latest posts

Recently Featured

Want to see your truck here? Share your photos and details in the forum.

Ranger Adventure Video

TRS Merchandise

Follow TRS On Instagram

TRS Sponsors


Sponsored Ad


Sponsored Ad


Amazon Deals

Sponsored Ad

Back
Top