Raider L
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2020
- Posts
- 1,892
- Reaction score
- 1,001
- Location
- Shreveport, LA
- First Name
- William
- Truck Year
- 1974
- Truck Model
- C10
- Engine Size
- 355
Polyurethane has certain properties that allow it to be very durable. I'm not a chemist but I have used it for a very long time under all kinds of conditions. It's very elastic. It compresses good up to a certain point and then it stops compressing. That's the advantage with poly that is better than rubber because poly won't compress as far as rubber, hence the squishiness of rubber and the firmness of poly. A truck with rubber suspension parts will sway and float much further than if it has polyurethane. You gain a large degree of performance from poly when you replace your rubber with it. Your steering gains a large degree of control when you learn poly's properties. Once you learn how far you can steer your truck in hard turns you know how much less it will sway. With rubber A arm bushings you know you can't steer around a curve at a certain speed and that's it. But with poly, depending on you shocks and springs, you can push you truck into much tighter turns at much higher speeds than if you are running rubber in you front suspension parts. Also in my truck I put in rear leaf spring bushings of polyurethane which controls the wind up and rebound of your leaf springs under acceleration and braking respectfully. In cornering the rubber bushing in the leaf spring will compress much more than polyurethane in a unpredictable manner. But with poly the compression is very predictable in both wind up and rebound. This predictability enables the suspension to be put in a tighter set up with closer tolerances than with rubber especially when a 4 link and pan hard bars are used, and with tubular A arms with coil over's. All cars and trucks used for all out racing use polyurethane in the suspension. Otherwise, if rubber is used the rubber is replaced at the slightest sign of stress. This is due to "splitting"
Some other properties of polyurethane is it doesn't split, it doesn't dry out, it doesn't loose its slippery properties, it is unaffected by road salts, dirt, grime, and high temperatures within certain ranges. You might get two or three years before you start seeing the affects of the road on rubber. Ten years after installation the polyurethane looks as good as the day you put it in. Now, don't get me wrong, polyurethane won't last forever even as tough as it is. If kept clean urethane will last for about fifteen to twenty years before you start seeing some minor edge splitting. Also to you will start seeing some surface drying. Once you see these indicators it would be a good idea to change the poly out. But if you keep it clean and there's not much stress on it you can get more than twenty years out of it. Another property of polyurethane is it resists shrinkage for a very long time. Rubber starts shrinking in the time period I mentioned above along with the other disadvantages.
Some other properties of polyurethane is it doesn't split, it doesn't dry out, it doesn't loose its slippery properties, it is unaffected by road salts, dirt, grime, and high temperatures within certain ranges. You might get two or three years before you start seeing the affects of the road on rubber. Ten years after installation the polyurethane looks as good as the day you put it in. Now, don't get me wrong, polyurethane won't last forever even as tough as it is. If kept clean urethane will last for about fifteen to twenty years before you start seeing some minor edge splitting. Also to you will start seeing some surface drying. Once you see these indicators it would be a good idea to change the poly out. But if you keep it clean and there's not much stress on it you can get more than twenty years out of it. Another property of polyurethane is it resists shrinkage for a very long time. Rubber starts shrinking in the time period I mentioned above along with the other disadvantages.