Mr Stay Puft
Member
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2022
- Posts
- 45
- Reaction score
- 68
- Location
- California
- First Name
- John
- Truck Year
- 1989
- Truck Model
- V1500 Suburban
- Engine Size
- 350 TBI
I have seen some mention of this in the threads but nothing with enough detail.
1989 V1500 Suburban
I installed 2" lift custom leaf springs from ORD. Much improved ride quality btw. They came with 5125 Bilstein shocks. 8.13" travel in the front and 10" travel in the rear. The metal sleeve in the lower bushing is too small for the stock bolt. The rubber bushings are also significantly narrower than the mount spacing in the rear. ORD informed me that the metal sleeve was optional. That the sleeve is for 1/2" bolts and without it is for 5/8". Also they said the bolts do not need to be tightened down to the point of crushing the rubber bushing. The gap is fine as the only movement is up and down.
After I had installed the lift, springs, and drop pitman I took the burb in to get the alignment checked. The mechanic flagged the shock install. He said you HAVE to use the sleeve and you HAVE to torque down the bolt to the proper torque and crush the rubber bushing. He said these were not the right shocks due to the issues with the lower mount.
I'm not sure on what the consensus is for install on these shocks. I have seen them mentioned a bunch on here as a good option but not much on the actual install. Can they be run without the sleeve? What torque is used? If there is no metal sleeve, and I use washers to take up the gap in the mount, if I torque up the bolt to factory spec there is no inner sleeve to prevent completely smashing the rubber bushing.
1989 V1500 Suburban
I installed 2" lift custom leaf springs from ORD. Much improved ride quality btw. They came with 5125 Bilstein shocks. 8.13" travel in the front and 10" travel in the rear. The metal sleeve in the lower bushing is too small for the stock bolt. The rubber bushings are also significantly narrower than the mount spacing in the rear. ORD informed me that the metal sleeve was optional. That the sleeve is for 1/2" bolts and without it is for 5/8". Also they said the bolts do not need to be tightened down to the point of crushing the rubber bushing. The gap is fine as the only movement is up and down.
After I had installed the lift, springs, and drop pitman I took the burb in to get the alignment checked. The mechanic flagged the shock install. He said you HAVE to use the sleeve and you HAVE to torque down the bolt to the proper torque and crush the rubber bushing. He said these were not the right shocks due to the issues with the lower mount.
I'm not sure on what the consensus is for install on these shocks. I have seen them mentioned a bunch on here as a good option but not much on the actual install. Can they be run without the sleeve? What torque is used? If there is no metal sleeve, and I use washers to take up the gap in the mount, if I torque up the bolt to factory spec there is no inner sleeve to prevent completely smashing the rubber bushing.