Mtpisgah
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Paul
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2020
- Threads
- 23
- Messages
- 751
- Reaction score
- 929
- Location
- Upstate SC
- Vehicle(s)
- 2021 JTM, 2018 JLR
- Occupation
- Engineer
Thanks, I understand the caster a bit better now. Stability is good. I drive 20k+ miles a year so how it drives is important. I will be off-road maybe twice a month and most of the stuff around here is doable in a stock Jeep.No worries man, i get it.
So, caster is how far back the steering knuckles are rotated back. Consider for visualization the extremes of the range as straight up and down; to a stretched out chopper bike.
Up and down quickest steering; chopper most stable at speed. It has become general consensus that stock caster degree is too close to up and down for quick steering on trail; but at the expense of an incredible lack of steering stability. By pushing it out a degree-degree and a half shows incredible gains in stability with no appreciable loss of quick steering when you need it; although it will weight the steering slightly.
The gains in highway stability are real.
Sooner or later stiffer springs will be available; although if youre constantly laden with a couple hundred pounds, I dont think youd find max tow springs to be harsh.
The AluCab canopy camper weighs about 450lbs, so by the time I outfit it with what I will carry on a daily basis vs a weekend trip, I will add another 50 to 150lbs in the bed. It gets Installed March 1 and I will see how it drives for a few weeks and then start with suspension mods. Hopefully Clayton or OME will have something by April, otherwise it will be bags or Max Tow coils.
We will be planning a trip to VA this spring to mountain bike, maybe we can meet up.
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