Wolf Island Diver
Well-Known Member
From a pure quantitative data standpoint, I think it was a fine video. It gave a good idea of the unladen measurements. Like you, I didn’t really agree with the conclusions or the subjective aspects. It did demonstrate my point though that the actual lift height was detached from the whatever each manufacturer called it.That review Brad did with that video was terrible and probably his worst one - being honest. All of those vehicles were totally stock with no weight in them. Not many people getting those lifts are fully stock and unloaded. So it is a terrible way to ‘review’ a lift when it is being used in a capacity and form totally different than what it was designed for. People who buy the AEV lift typically do so to accommodate a heavier constant load. Same with clayton or synergy. That video is a really poor example of what to expect with those lift options. For reference when I had about 200 pounds under GVW and the AEV lift with steer smarts (with clevite bushings) track bars, it rode like a cadillac. Which is wildly different than what Brad experienced because that rig he drove was totally stock.
In my experience driving with the AEV suspension, the articulation gets noticeably better under load. They just have a ton of preload for gear which makes them stiff. I’m also not particularly excited about short arm suspension systems over drop brackets. They basically correct geometry like brackets do. They don’t transform the truck into a rock buggy. I’ve never really wished this thing had massive amounts more articulation. I’m not trying to rock crawl $100k worth of truck and risk destroying it when I could buy a used buggy or build one for $20k. For what most of us are doing, pretty much any name brand mid level lift is fine.
Brad could have made a video, and just said. “Here’s a bunch of lifts. They’re all pretty good” But that doesn’t sell on social media ?
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