There's been many times I've searched the internet for something, and it brought me right back to here. I just saw a post where a guy was talking about TTB and said he found the information on another site, and he as quoting
@4x4junkie article HERE.
@alwaysFlOoReD I actually posed this question to ChatGPT but didn't ask it as well as you did. So, garbage in, garbage out. LOL. Maybe you should ask it to explain the 1.5 leverage of the TTB and what effect it has on spring rate.
The point in all of this is trying to give people some guidance when trying to figure out how much lift their going to get from a coil spring and what to expect. But I didn't know how to address progressive rate springs.
I have to admit, I was a bit surprised when JD told me their springs were 385/650. 650 seems like a really high rate.
Ok
@4x4junkie I'm going to throw a few more questions at you:
1) Why would the second rate be so high for a Ranger?
You had me going for a bit there Jim, I couldn't remember writing an article titled "Is The Ford TTB Suspension Really That Bad?"... But I see now that it is the forum Sticky "Is a SAS the only option?" lol. Nicely done transferring it to the Tech articles (title change seems appropriate too).
As for the rates, I'm a little surprised JD told you at all... I remember they once were real tight about their stuff, even to the point of refusing to sell you individual lift components unless you could prove that you had previously purchased one of their kits.
The best guess I have is the higher rate is a leftover relic from when common shock absorber technologies were what they were 25-30 years ago (twin-tube dampers, none of which had reservoirs, many not even gas-charged, clunky dual & triple-shock kits being the way to get more damping). Compared to the shocks of today (Fox, King, and even cheaper offerings such as Skyjacker ADX and Rough Country Vertex) they offered little damping control, especially during fast compression. A progressively stiff spring likely was the answer back then if you wanted to go fast and/or catch a little air.
2) I'm trying to understand why we're only using the lower rate. Is it because the section of coil with the 650 PPI rate won't compress at all because the weight is being absorbed by the coils rated at 385 PPI? Is that weight not transferred through the whole coil?
The weight is transferred through the entire length of the coil. The different spacings between the windings is irrelevant to the spring rate up until only that point when the closer-spaced windings begin to touch. At that point the spring is then working at the higher of the two ratings.
Back in 2006, glfredrick posted on Pirate4x4 (HERE) "Before you just go throwing a bunch of springs at the TTB suspension, you have to know a little bit about the geometry of that suspension. Each different type of suspension has a different amount of leverage needed to support the weight of the vehicle. An SAS (full width axle) is a "longer lever" than a TTB. That means that the carrying capacity for the springs needs to be less on an SAS than on the TTB."
I looked at coil spring rates between a Ford F-150 Dana 44 and Dana 44 TTB and didn't see any big differences between spring rates. I went back and looked at the load rates, and a 1985 Ford F-150 coil spring has a load rating of 1,428 and a 1979 Ford F-150 coil spring has a load rating of 1,700.
A 1428 load rate for a TTB coil vs 1700 for SA does seems backward to me also. Load rate was something I never did fully quite grasp... I came to the conclusion that it was simply a number used for the suspension to be set to a certain ride height, had nothing to do with what the maximum the spring could actually support was (I may be wrong on that).
But if you look at the specifications you have for
spring rates on your coil spring chart (assuming they are directly from the manufacturer), it infact does show a Skyjacker F-150 6" TTB coil (623PPI) is 171PPI stiffer than the F-150 6" SA coil (452PPI). Interestingly, that number for the TTB coil is almost exactly 1.4× higher than the number for the SA coil... It was 1.4:1 that I had figured for the fullsize (F-150/Bronco) TTB leverage ratio (this due to the longer beams and the spring being slightly closer to the wheel relative to the pivot).
I'd check for the same for TTB Ranger coils at 1.5×, but alas, no SA Ranger to compare it to lol.
Junkie, you replied in that conversation with "Multiply the sprung weight by 1.5 (TTB beam leverage), then divide by 2 (this will be the amount of weight each coil will be supporting)." But I haven't been able to support that by finding Dana 44 TTB coil springs with higher spring rates than a Dana 44 live axle. I'm not saying you're wrong, I was just looking for a reference to 'show me' so that I could actually understand it.
I would really like to understand this more and what importance or effect that it has.
That had nothing to do with determining the leverage ratio itself.
What that was, was a set of equations to be able to find the amount of weight the coil spring itself would be subjected to based off your vehicle's weight, so you could then select a suitable spring based on it's free length & spring rate.
Determining the leverage ratio is (like you stated, post #48) simply finding the mid-point along the TTB "lever arm" where the spring is mounted in relation to the pivot axis, and the tire's contact patch.
In actuality, it goes a bit deeper than that because the pivot axis actually runs diagonally from the beam pivot over to the radius arm bushing (and this is where that diagram I once had would've come in handy). It's been forever & a day, but I seem to recall the ratio might've been closer to around 1.48 or so (just barely under 1.5).
With stock radius arms, both sides of the suspension (pivot axes) actually are symmetrical with each other (so there would not be a leverage ratio difference between the passenger & driver sides). The passenger beam being shorter was mostly to account for the fact the beam pivot was located further rearward along its diagonal pivot axis than the driver side (well, and differential pumpkin clearance too). Extended radius arms actually distorted this symmetry slightly, but not by enough to be significant.
(hopefully you were able to follow all that... The TTB certainly was an engineering marvel

)