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Jeep Mojave Shock Length when Sprung

styck.shyfter

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Looking for the length of the factory fox shocks on a Mojave when sprung - as close to stock as possible.
I forgot to do this measurement before I installed my springs.
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outdoor.adventures

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The front shocks are 20.25" long at ride height (eye to eye). They are 15.75" when compressed, 23.75" when extended. That 8" of total travel is divided between 4.5" of compression and 3.5" of extension when traveling away from the ride height length.

The rear shocks are 22.25" at ride height, 25.75" extended, 17.75" compressed, also with 8" of travel.
 
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styck.shyfter

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The front shocks are 20.25" long at ride height (eye to eye). They are 15.75" when compressed, 23.75" when extended. That 8" of total travel is divided between 4.5" of compression and 3.5" of extension when traveling away from the ride height length.

The rear shocks are 22.25" at ride height, 25.75" extended, 17.75" compressed, also with 8" of travel.
thank you ! exactly what i needed!!
 

outdoor.adventures

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No problem. If you're working on getting back to factory-designed shock lengths with the bypass zones, I also made this graphic of the front shock.

To add more to my original thread post:


Sometimes springs sag over time and accessories (steel bumper, winch, a bunch of ducks) can cause them to ride lower, effectively shortening the ride height length of the shock.

My OG post is describing the bypass zones of the shock. Jeep engineered (and shipped from factory) the optimal ride height of the shock to be 3.5" of downtravel (aka extension) and 4 3/8" of uptravel (aka compression). The front shock length (aka ride height) for these two measurements to be true is 20.5". This is why mine, when originally measured, and @Aj58 's brand new Mojave are 20.5" front.

In many cases besides the Mojave shocks, the shock optimal extension and compression is split 50/50 - but not for these, like @mx5red said, for hitting bumps at speed and allowing for more dampening during shock compression. This is in part because the Mojave shocks have two distinct compression bypass zones, while only one extension zone.

Here's an image I made showing the zones and ride height of the front Mojave shocks. It illustrates how the more your springs have sagged/compressed such that your shocks are less than 20.5" eye to eye, the closer the piston gets to Zone 2 - causing for a harsher ride. If you're at 19" or 19.5" you're literally riding up on the firmer zone. If you're at 20.5", you're 1.5" from Zone 2. On the other side of it, the longer your springs are, the less downtravel you'll have as the piston moves closer to Zone 1 and the bottom of the shock - which is worse for articulation/traction off-road, especially in rock crawling.

mojave-shock.png
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