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Thread: Parabolic Springs

  1. #1
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    Parabolic Springs

    Just picked up very cheap 88" Series 3, the last owner stuck a holden motor in it. Sorry thats how it came. It has very sagged suspension. I seen an add for Parabolic Springs from Canada. ???Are they any good/Are they legal to fit in NSW??? Would you fit them to yours.
    Any help appreciated Rover457

  2. #2
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    yep, great little bits of kit.

    you can buy them in au from a couple of different mobs...

    i have them on my swb series 2
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  3. #3
    landytotherescue Guest
    Its the best mod that I have done to my SWB. And one I will never regret doing

  4. #4
    Lucas Guest
    What have people paid for parabolics.

  5. #5
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    The Canadian ones are usually Rocky mountain. I reckon best around. We used TI console for a while but had a few dramas, so swapped to Rocky mountain.

  6. #6
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    My old series III with rocky mountain pair of bollocks
    They say they are as good as coils, the're not, but very good for leaves. these were on for a few years and don't seemed to have sagged.

    1995 Defender 110 300TDI :D
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    Ex '66 109" flat deck, '82 109" 3 door, '89 110 CSW V8, '74 Range Rover, '66 88" soft top, '78 88" soft top, '95 Disco ES V8, '88 Surf, '90 Surf, '84 V8 Surf, '91 Vitara.

  7. #7
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    I put British Springs Parabolics on my SIII and the improvement to the ride was great. I got 4 leaf rears and 2 leaf fronts.

    The parabolics put a lot more strain on your shock absorbers, so be sure you don't skimp on shocks. I put KONI on the back, but I couldn't get KONI for the front.

    They handled the Simpson Desert really well with a heavy load travelling east-west, but I did break a parabolic spring on the Ernst Giles Rd in Central Australia where there were rough corrugations. Whether shocker fade led to spring failure, or spring failure led to shocker demise I don't know, but for outback touring, I'd say avoid the parabolis unless you're light weight (SWB or no Bullbar kind of light weight). Unfortunately you can't get anything with more than 2 leaves for the front.

  8. #8
    JDNSW's Avatar
    JDNSW is offline RoverLord Silver Subscriber
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    Quote Originally Posted by Michael2 View Post
    I put British Springs Parabolics on my SIII and the improvement to the ride was great. I got 4 leaf rears and 2 leaf fronts.

    The parabolics put a lot more strain on your shock absorbers, so be sure you don't skimp on shocks. I put KONI on the back, but I couldn't get KONI for the front.

    They handled the Simpson Desert really well with a heavy load travelling east-west, but I did break a parabolic spring on the Ernst Giles Rd in Central Australia where there were rough corrugations. Whether shocker fade led to spring failure, or spring failure led to shocker demise I don't know, but for outback touring, I'd say avoid the parabolis unless you're light weight (SWB or no Bullbar kind of light weight). Unfortunately you can't get anything with more than 2 leaves for the front.
    As Michael points out, with parabolics shock absorbers become as important as with coils.
    With conventional leaf springs substantial damping is provided by friction between the leaves. The parabolic springs deliberately reduce this friction and damping to almost nothing. This is the source of their superiority over conventional leaf springs. However, it does mean you depend more on your shock absorbers, and also means that these are worked harder, so you should always fit the shock absorbers specified by the spring manufacturer.
    However, I disagree that the broken spring could have been due to shock absorber fade - breakage of the spring just about has to be a manufacturing fault (although it could be the result of a stress concentration resulting, for example, from stone damage)! In this day and age there is no excuse for springs breaking unless the shock absorber parted company allowing the spring to be bent beyond its elastic limit.
    I am not sure I would avoid outback touring with parabolics, although there is the drawback that IF you break a leaf, it is more serious than a broken leaf on a conventional leaf spring.

    John
    John

    JDNSW
    1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
    1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol

  9. #9
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    V8hybrid

    how have u found the rocky mountains? n e dramas?

    bisho

  10. #10
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    Parabolics 2

    Thanks for all the comments, and I will fit some to mine. However after speaking to a normal spring reset company, they said that fitting Parabolics may need engineering approval in NSW. could this be true ?? Has anyone registered a NSW vehicle with Parabolic springs ??
    Thanks Rover457

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