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Couple things on the rear feeling jumpy:
first- as goofy as it sounds, check to make sure that the tires arent over inflated. The extra 10 PSI that ford/dealers like to put in the tires makes a really big difference.
Second- if it is still too "happy" , replacing the rear leaf springs with deavers makes a MASSIVE difference. The truck feels how I would have expected it to from the factory with the deavers. nice and planted. More importantly, very very predictable.
Seems like there are a half dozen of us on this board with gt350s and raptors. Best of both worlds!
Welcome to the club.
Congrats OP on the new steed!
I hear you on the handling issues. The rear does not inspire any confidence at speed, whereas my 2014 Sierra 4x4 on 20" wheels was surprisingly spry. I found that the Hellwig made a major improvement with no discernable loss of ride quality.
I think you will like the SP-542 plugs they eliminated most of the hesistation and hiccups in part-throttle acceleration for me.
Lastly try the dynamat trick on the rear sub. Its like getting a new sub for almost free
Live in Colorado and at one point was daily driving those I-70 mountain corners. They feel worse than they really are and in my Raptor I take them 15-20mph above the recommended speed all the time without issue.
The suspension is soft and you will get some body movement, but the truck is far more stable than it feels. Don't react and just drive on through it and you will be fine. The truck wants to hold its line and the only time it is dangerous is when the driver moves the wheel to "correct" or hits the brakes. The driver's reactions is what unsettles the truck and makes it dangerous, not the soft suspension.
Do all your braking before the corner. "Trail braking" as you say causes the truck to understeer and you will lose cornering performance. It also increases the risk of losing the backend if too much weight shifts forward. No gas, no brake, and no wheel movement in the corner and the truck will surprise you with what it can do safely.
Don't fear the body movement, the truck will figure it out all on its own. Driver inputs only make it worse. You are much better off coasting around a corner than trying to slow in the middle of it.
Definition: Trail braking is a driving and motorcycle riding technique where the brakes are used beyond the entrance to a turn, and then gradually released up to, or before, the apex of the turn.
Has absolutely zero to do with a hand brake or actuating just the rear brakes.
The method is about continuing to brake after the entrance to a turn in order to control weight balance and transfer.
It has zero to do with using a front brake vs a rear brake, or both. You have the luxury on a bike to be able to control rotation more granularly by modulating the brake bias independently, but that does not change the concept, nor the definition. Ad when trailbraking properly on a bike, you ABSOLUTELY use both front and rear brakes. Your front brake usage declines as you add more lean, the rear brake usage ends up being a direct correlation to how much you need/want to rotate the rear wheel.
On a motorcycle, it is a bit different and often more confusing. ( My background is supermoto ) Some people equate trail braking to "backing it in" and tend to assume that you would only apply rear brake to trailbrake. That is not the case. "backing it in" is trail braking at it's extreme with 100% rear brake bias (and you're adding the benefit of downshifting for the right exit gear and exit angle. when backing it in you never actually stop the rear wheel completely either). The oversteer and skid that ensues is actually what you're trying to avoid when employing the technique properly.
Trailbraking is about grip. backing it in is about a controlled slide.
Hotlap, Glad you had a fantastic trip home congrats on the new rig looks great in the pics.
I hope to have mine in the garage by Saturday Night!!
Lol!!!
Supermoto is FUN!!!!
We made supermoto tracks with a lot of fun challenging jumps on Friday night and then roadraced on the other tracks Saturday and Sunday man those were the days and damn now I feel old and beat up.
Only time I used the front brake even remotely close to an apex I kissed pavement! I much prefer to back it in as you say.
I was bored so wanted to know how op “backed it in” and congrats on the new Raptor
Surprised you didn’t complain about the brakes since you have been driving your 350! Every time I drive my GRand Sport I wish for more brakes. Should be remedied soon with an R1 BBK
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Lol!!!
Supermoto is FUN!!!!
We made supermoto tracks with a lot of fun challenging jumps on Friday night and then roadraced on the other tracks Saturday and Sunday man those were the days and damn now I feel old and beat up.
Only time I used the front brake even remotely close to an apex I kissed pavement! I much prefer to back it in[emoji4] as you say.
I was bored so wanted to know how op “backed it in” and congrats on the new Raptor[emoji4]
Surprised you didn’t complain about the brakes since you have been driving your 350! Every time I drive my GRand Sport I wish for more brakes in the Raptor. Should be remedied soon with an R1 BBK[emoji4]
Call deaver ASAP 3-5 wk wait time!
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People often criticize the Raptor's brakes, but they fail to take into account the difference between threshold braking on the street versus threshold braking in the dirt.
Obviously there is gobs of traction on the street and in a high performance sports car you want to the braking pressure to ramp up aggressively.
But grabby brakes are the last thing you want on dirt because that would result in a lockup and loss of control every time you brushed the brakes. Instead, the "soft" and "mushy" brakes give us better modulation on loose traction surfaces so we don't lock up the brakes as easily and we have better control.
The Raptor's brakes feel lazy and weak on the street, but they weren't designed to excel on the street. But as others have noted, when you get on them all the way, they have a lot of stopping power. But the 17" rotors overheat easily during heavy braking so hot lapping the raptor at the local track probably isn't a good idea.