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That is the style I remember as being the longest. I thought about chopping it down, especially the side metal piece but found another shorter one.
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Could anyone with the D35 TTB stock in their truck share a picture and a height measurement for the driver's front bumpstop? I feel like the stop in this position is different between 4x2 and 4x4, but I can't find any hard info. Thanks in advance.
I've got both relatively handy and had just assumed they were different because they're identified as such. I'll throw a measuring tape on both sets and let you know the results. FWIW my 6 inch lift only extended the bumpstops about 4 inches over stock length, which is weird and I've never thought about it until now (the lift has been on the truck for better than a decade).So the buckets were one of the things I looked into after I noticed the bump was contacting. Per various sources, the buckets are meant to be the same. There's also no difference in shock length. I always thought this was kind of dodgy, because mine explicitly have "4x2" stamped into them, but the buckets from my crossmember donor truck are long gone, and I'm not really in the mood to grind & punch the rivets out to rescue the set off the lone 4x4 Ranger at my junkyard.
Even if the buckets were different (or bolted to the frame at a different height?), that shouldn't be functionally different towards ride height than having different spring lengths, right? Like if the 2wd upper coil seat sat 2" higher, that would put my axle closer to the frame, but you should be able to compensate with a 2" spacer.
I can't remember if I posted this before, but during my testing, I established that with the longer 2wd springs on the 4x4 axle, I was already approaching the alignment limits of lengthening my springs. I could jam another 1.5" puck in there, completely hose my camber, and still not get the 2wd driver's bump completely off the diff.
It's for increased wheel travel/articulation.FWIW my 6 inch lift only extended the bumpstops about 4 inches over stock length, which is weird and I've never thought about it until now (the lift has been on the truck for better than a decade).
I don't plan on changing a thing, it works well and just barely doesn't bottom the shocks out.It's for increased wheel travel/articulation.
No need to lower the bumpstop any more than you have to, it only needs to be lowered enough to keep the shock from fully bottoming out on compression.
Also IIRC, 2WD and 4x4 coil springs are the same (or at least, the same springs come with, say, a 2WD 6" TIB lift and a 4WD 6" TTB lift). The difference in height is in the beam itself.
I'll throw a measuring tape on both sets and let you know the results.
Also IIRC, 2WD and 4x4 coil springs are the same