
Originally Posted by
Slunnie
You've clearly done a lot of reading and research on this, but all of the information you have combines a number of setups that wont necessarily work together. It is mixing a big lift high flex setup with a heavy touring setup and they don't necessarily work together and it will cost a lot of money.
Front springs, you will need at least 220lb/in spring rate if you're running a bullbar and especially if it has a winch in it. Lower than that and the springs are not able to sustain ride height, then a year down the track you're replacing front springs.
Rear springs, 270lb linear is soft and you can run them with Polyairs when loaded or 300-340lb/in progressive rears. Don't be under the impression these rates don't flex, they will. I wont go into the whole linear vs progressive as thats an article in itself, especially with the progressives.
Dobinsons have a great name and product, but they're not so different to any other Australian spring manufacturers. They really made their name about 20 years ago in the custom 4WD world because they were more than happy to make custom springs. I'm just saying, they're good but don't lock yourself in to one brand.
Shocks, if you're touring I would recommend something like Bilstein that have the oil seperated from the pressurising gas as they dont fade as they heat up. Remote canisters also if you want Gucci as the concept is the same but they're not necessary unless you need it for packaging the suspension travel setup - ie for a given open length they have a shorter closed length. Twin shell, nitro etc shocks, doesn't matter who makes them, they all have the same problems by design when touring, the gas and oil mix when they get hot and they fade until they cool off. Foam cell, I don't think are suitable for touring irrespective of make or size.
For shock length, 12" is extremely long and I would argue far too long for 2" springs. Actually 2" springs are not that much different in free length compared to standard springs. For 4" lift springs most people are running 10" or 12" short body shocks at a stretch. 12" shocks will probably give you suspension travel but they're not the limiting factor in producing articulation which is probably what you're after - you would need to either have ACE or run disconnects on the swaybars (not both!). I'm not a believer in dislocating spring and the regs require springs to be retained by the original method, but also with the Disco2 suspension design, the links inherently produce a lot of roll stiffness which doen't make dislocation all that beneficial anyway, its a different setup to the rears on Rangie Classics, Disco1s, Defenders etc where it works well. When LR changed to the radius arm rear suspension on the D2 it balanced the rear to work with the front already as the roll stiffnesses are far closer that what the others have.
Shock turret heights, you will need to compare shock closed lengths to gain that measurement.
Seriously, 2" lift is just springs and shocks and nothing else. If you setup well and max those springs right out, then add to that a Xmember spacer, rear ABS extensions and brake line extensions. Nothing else on that list is needed.
Tyres: That setup will run up to 265/75-16 max on standard rims without rubbing.
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