2 leaf in the front?
the stage one has coil front, leaf rears I believe
Hi me and a mate are thinking on putting rock mountain para's in his isuzu stage 1, we are worried that the 2 leaf front springs might be too soft with the extra weight of the isuzu engine. its going to be a offroad play truck so we want best articulation possible, also if here has gone down this part what rear springs did you use?
2 leaf in the front?
the stage one has coil front, leaf rears I believe
Go back to school procrastination, you have failed on your last Land Rover identification exam.The County/110 had coils front and rear but the SIII-Stage 1 is leaf springs all round!
Northy
There is an optional 3rd leaf available from Rocky Mountain for the front springs but is not held in stock by any of the vendors in Oz. RMP suggest it is a good option for those who do heavy off road work or even for the front of a civilian LR forward control. Talk to RMP they actually have an understanding of Isuzu powered Landys owning an Isuzu County themselves.
Last edited by Lotz-A-Landies; 20th February 2010 at 10:19 AM. Reason: addit in blue-italics
You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.
Don't waste your money! We did and I reckon parabolics are bolics alright! Isuzu is defintely too heavy for the 2 leaf fronts. I reckon you'd be better off altering the original set. Do a search on here, there is plenty of info.
cheers
Evelyn
Experiences will obviously differ, but I fitted Rocky Mountain parabolics to my Stage 1 Isuzu. I had no worries at all with really good results. They were 2 leaf springs and didn't sag under the weight. They really improved the comfort level too.
You'll find that upward travel may be limited by the bump stop extensions. To stop the front axle hitting the Isuzu sump they welded extensions to the chassis to limit upward movement.
so does this mean that raising the shock points is a no no, or if we put in extended shocks and raise the shock points so that when the extended shocks are fully compressed they are at same height as the standard shocks when fully compressed.
if that makes sense.
and back to springs, for off road performance would it be better to have a crack at making a set of eliptics like isuzurovers
On a Stage 1 Isuzu you are probably better off leaving the shock mounts where they are, especially if you are fitting parabolics. You'll only get marginal improvements if it all works and risk making things worse if it doesn't.
If you want a solution that someone else has tested and done all the hard work on, then go for the parabolics. If you have lots of time and a pile of good condition leaf springs lying around, plus a friendly spring works nearby, you could try to make up some yourself. Ben (Isuzurover) got great results making up his own springs, although you wouldn't want to suffer from seasickness![]()
well i have the springworks and the time, but the piles of lr springs is the part thats going to let me down, so i think it will be rocky mountain para's. thanks allot dave your input has been much appreciated
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