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Thread: corrugations - fast or slow?

  1. #1
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    corrugations - fast or slow?

    Good day all,

    I know that not all corrugations are the same, anyway, on a trip this past weekend the car (RRS) was smoothest at about 70 - 80km/h on a corrugated dirt/gravel road.

    So am I right in assuming that speed caused less damage/ wear than driving at say 50km/h but being shaken to bits?

    Also noticed a massive difference between normal mode and grass/gravel/snow or 'mud and ruts' with regards to stability on a road with smallish gravel 'marbles' that had been swept off the driving line to the edges. Did most of the trip in normal mode but swithed to ggs after going through an off-camber bend sideways. DSC pulled the car straight alot quicker than if it wasn't there, but in some situations it killed power when needed.

    Cheers!

  2. #2
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    right about mud/ruts and ggs

    I have found that mud and ruts is good for loose snow so perhaps loose gravel as well. The GGS seems to me more for hard slippery surfaces such as ice, but I suppose packed gravel qualifies.

    Either setting is generally better than normal for anything other than pavement.

    As to speed, I know real slow and big bumps can be wrong as the suspension never gets to "work", hence I can believe that 80 kph with flying rocks and lots of dust is easier on the vehicle than 50 kph, plus everyone can see you coming, that part is for certain.

    Also, one definitely wants mud flaps installed.

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by Leo View Post
    So am I right in assuming that speed caused less damage/ wear than driving at say 50km/h but being shaken to bits?
    I'd say so. The shocks would be working harder but I'd prefer to wear them out than end up with a vehicle shaken to pieces, let alone the improved occupant comfort. The ride may be better again with a small lift to get a bit more suspension travel to avoid occasionally hitting the bump-stops.
    MY21.5 L405 D350 Vogue SE with 19s. Produce LLAMS for LR/RR, Jeep GC/Dodge Ram
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  4. #4
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    might decide I need the LLAMS yet

    Quote Originally Posted by Graeme View Post
    I'd say so. The shocks would be working harder but I'd prefer to wear them out than end up with a vehicle shaken to pieces, let alone the improved occupant comfort. The ride may be better again with a small lift to get a bit more suspension travel to avoid occasionally hitting the bump-stops.
    Even though I say I do not need a higher ride, that hitting the bump stops comments has me thinking.

    In spring, our City "paved" streets are a war zone of pot holes so banging down on the bump stops is common just on a normal "go get milk" run.

    Shocks here are more often broken by continued hitting the bump stops long before they die of normal use.

    That, and I am starting to understand the new recovery feature - it sounds like assuming no mechanical problems, (failed air compressor, broken air airlines), just electrical, that the recovery mode should get the 3 back up to at least normal height from an electrical induced fail to the bump stops situation?

  5. #5
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    The biggest problem with Landies or modern 4wd's in general is that they absorb and hide the rough ride so well, you never really know how hard the suspension is working which can be very tricky.

    On one of my trips I drove my mates D3 and he had my D1.
    When I got out as we stopped for photos all the time(tourist), I was fine and he commented on how rough the corrugations were.
    I said really? So I felt my shocks(Bilstein) on my D1 and Yes--they were working thats for sure.

    He said it reminded him of the army days. I always thought my ride in the D1 was wicked but rightly so, its ordinary compared to the D3/4. I does however make you realise that the suspension in all cars are working hard to keep up, its just that some show it more and it could well be a good thing so you slow down or find a comfortable speed.
    We later went on a fire wood run and took my car D1, we sat on 70km'h on the corrogations and he said that was totally different ride on same road as it was when I was lead vehicle and sat on 60km/h. So each vehicle depending on tyres/ pressures and settings will have a different sweet spot for speed I found out.

  6. #6
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    The bigger issue is vehicle controllability. It is possible to get a relatively smooth ride at high speed, because you're skimming the tops of the corrguations.

    But good luck trying to control the car at that speed.

    For me, the best speed is the one at which there is least bouncing and I retain the ability to control the car.

    Reducing tyre pressures helps. How far depends on the state of the track. For example, the Perdika track is one of the worst roads I've driven and we dropped to 20psi for that. Higher-speed dirt roads maybe 25, 30, all dependent on weight, tyre construction and especially speed.

  7. #7
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    I remember a few trips out north of Oodnadatta one in a RRC and the other previously in a S2. I know not much comparison but no matter what speed in the S2 you get shaken. In the RRC 80 was great, as it is in the D2 I have now, but as mentioned good luck with control as you can feel it floating on top of the road. It's like a feeling of understeer turning into a curve but as you go through it you have to watch not ending up drifting the back out.

  8. #8
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    I have found 80/100k fine on corrugations, however you have to be mindful of controlling the vehicle from time to time, and having a wider track road will help with a slight loss either side. As for tyre pressure i never once let the tyres down, some say you should other not, maybe it depends on your tyre type. You do seem to skim the surface when driving at a higher speed, but you can still get shaken from time to time on the different types of corrugations that seem to appear, and a slower speed is then required, and i bet the ride in a RRS or D4 etc will be very different to a Defender.

  9. #9
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    80Kmh "skimming" is far harder on the suspension than going slowly . Graeme would probably change his ideas about preferring shocks to fail if he was stuck at Drysdale River for a week or so waiting on new shocks.

    My experience is that you can skim up to a certain level of corrugations and after that you just have to slow down. And my theory is that the level of corrugation depends on the size and amplitude of the corrugation.
    The worst corrugations I have experienced were on the Kalumburu road, Mitchell falls road and ABC Bay track.

    On all of these I had to slow to maybe 15-20Kmh as there was no speed that was "skimming"
    These were in all cases caused by tourist 4WD buses who did not air down and created a corrugation about 100MM high with spacing of 150MM. These corrugations in my 2inch lifted RRC with Bilstien shocks seemed to cause a resonant frequency. I assume this as all roads lead nowhere and do not carry many heavy trucks.

    I spoke to 3 separate people who were 200 LC owners , who had actually destroyed front shocks on these roads by the tops blowing out, and all had travelled fast ie 80Kmh.

    BTW the ride is much smoother even at lower speeds if you knock say 6-10PSI from the tyres , in mine about 22-24 front and 30-32 rear. I set a max of 85Kmh at these pressures and had no problems in over 4000Km of dirt, and towing an off road camper whose tyres I knocked down to about 18PSI because it is light.

    So IMHO , decisions should be made according to the conditions. The one thing I would say is slow down when you see a car approaching. There is nothing that rates you as a City Arsehole more than passing a car from the opposite direction at 80Kmh and possibly breaking their screen.
    Regards Philip A

  10. #10
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    It reminds me of travel thru the Serengeti...A hell road for corrugations..We were in 300tdi discos and seldom out of 3rd gear for days on end...We were overtaken by a Toyota troopie..one of those game spotting type wagons that was trying to find the harmonic balance to speed across the bumps..

    All to no avail as we passed him some time later with the rear shock mounting smashed off.

    So it pays not to underestimate the work your suspension is doing..

    As it was we went through two sets of shocks and even got one set flown in overnight from Arusha.

    Common sense must prevail and as an owner of a D1 and a D3 the difference between driver comfort is a world apart

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