Dudebrodude
Full Access Member
Probably have to unbolt the shock and try and jack up the truck high enough to set the coil back inyeah that sounds terrifying to have happen out on trail. Wtf do you do then?
Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
Probably have to unbolt the shock and try and jack up the truck high enough to set the coil back inyeah that sounds terrifying to have happen out on trail. Wtf do you do then?
I guess this is possible since he is on a lift and you and I are on the ground so the axle has to be supported but even then I think the mechanic would have to remove the Panhard Bar for the axle to drop and the spring to come out.I’d assume a tech that’s used to swapping shocks on leaf spring trucks might not support the axle when unbolting the shock. With a coil rear end the shock is keeping the axle from dropping to the point the spring can slip out of the bucket. With a leaf spring truck I’m pretty sure you could unbolt the shock at full droop without supporting the axle. I’ve always placed a jack under the axle when doing it so I could be wrong.
I’m more concerned with the report of it happening on the trail. It’s a bit surprising there’s nothing locking the spring in to the buckets at the top and bottom. If it’s doing this to stock setups those spacers to lift the rear end seem like a really bad idea.
Ya, I’m not sure, this is my first non-leaf truck and I haven’t had to pull the shocks yet.I guess this is possible since he is on a lift and you and I are on the ground so the axle has to be supported but even then I think the mechanic would have to remove the Panhard Bar for the axle to drop and the spring to come out.
A heavy-duty ratchet strap can condense a spring enough to get it back into place. I've done it on the trail before. Super dangerous way. Always buy a high-quality spring condenser with multiple safety points. I've heard the horror stories. The best way mechanically to put on springs is to always drop the axel so that all of the other components get retorqued to spec.
yeah that sounds terrifying to have happen out on trail. Wtf do you do then?
Probably need to carry some strut compressor. Maybe limit straps ?yeah that sounds terrifying to have happen out on trail. Wtf do you do then?
See pictures. Pretty pissed off….
….
Not going to touch it myself, but pretty pissed off. How can they screw this up?
View attachment 403576View attachment 403577
Yeah, it is a dreadful experience. I agree. Took it to one dealer and they said one thing. Took it to another dealer (same ownership group in the next town) and they 100% contradicted the other dealer. This was for warranty work. I know there are good ones out there, but there are a lot that are making it impossible to trust any of them.Its so sad the state that ford dealers have fallen to. Everyone I talk to DREADS taking their vehicle in. Every time I go .... its an issue. Lies, broken promises, more lies. I'm so glad I'm not a service advisor anymore.