@californiajeeping
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2020
- Threads
- 16
- Messages
- 958
- Reaction score
- 1,012
- Location
- California
- Vehicle(s)
- 2022 Jeep Gladiator diesel, 1977 cj5 LS swapped
Another non-Rubicon diesel here that couldn't benefit from the TSB but definitely bottoms out. For $220 shipped and a couple hours of garage time the Clayton 0.5" lift springs are absolutely the cheapest and quickest solution. I put mine on this Saturday and hit the trail on Sunday. I can still get the truck to bottom out if I try hard but it's 90% better than before and I'd honestly have to compare a gasser side by side on the same bump to see if I'm just pushing the truck to the natural limits of stock suspension travel.
For rake I'd say it's not level but closer to level than to OEM rake. It's a subtle positive visual change.
A few install notes: Follow the various youtube vids but realize the leave out a key detail (maybe diesel specific?): the passenger side suspension won't droop enough unless you remove the lower track bar bolt, then it drops right down. To get it to reconnect you'll have to finish everything but that, then lower the front until it's weighted. Then have someone move the steering wheel which will shift the entire body until the track bar bottom end lines up with the mounting hole.
Also, if working on your own use a piece of double sided tape on the upper spring perches to hold them in place once you have the little rubber ears correctly in the holes, so that you can then leave it hanging correctly while you jack up the supension and reseat the spring.
Get a set of the falcon bump stops. I posted pictures previously but they are taller and engage softer. The spacer/limiter on the stock bump stops gets hit causing that hard clack or clank you get.
I would have personally gone with a 2" or 2.5" spring minimum. I did the metal cloak lift which raised the front like 3.75" and wish it had another inch to bump stop.
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