@FordTechOne anyone “Evel Knieveling”(tm) a Raptor clearly understands ANY factory warranty does not apply to any damage from off-road use/jumping/off-roading/etc.
I encourage folks to have fun, enjoy life, break the truck, modify, stress OEM vehicles and when they break them (outside the legal OEM parameters)—call the aftermarket to ask them to pay for the damage and allow for CQI (extensive engineering) to see what failed during the “hold the beer moment” as any rational engineer would do.
OEMs (mine already has) are adopting technology that will let us know 360 G-forces. This is a good thing for everyone—yes, everyone.
Please read your warranty as no company warranties off-road, racing, etc. You may hit a bump at the coffee shop, and that is all good. That is marketing.
NOTE1: Frame is an ecosystem. Rigid and strong is what we want. Bumpstops cannot absorb the energy from jumping a truck.
NOTE2: Physics 101 “tuning forks”—steel is a great tuning fork. The energy from a hard landing cascades throughout the “ecosystem” of the fram (Forces are transferred and will find the weakest point in the frame). That includes every component that receives forces delivered from all impacts—throughout the life of the vehicle.
NOTE3: Bumpstop upgrades are useless (some look really cool though). If you are intent on avoiding frame damage—increase suspension travel (and void your warranty). At least—suspension travel provides an opportunity to avoid hitting the “bump stops” when you drive through the big coffee shop speed bump—at high speed to impress.
NOTE4: You have to engineer the entire steel frame as a structure—as gusseting is pointless as is creates stress risers. You must strengthen the steel frame (as an ecosystem including all mounting points) if you want to “improve on OEM”.
In closing, please have fun—modify your vehicle to your liking. Break it and share what broke with OEM. We are not paying for any of it.
Then hold the aftermarket accountable for legal claims when ABC, XYZ, part does not perform to standard—and kaboom occurs.
Do not call OEM.
I hope this is helpful for all who are enthusiasts.