I have a 2018 Screw, stock, with 45K miles. Its my daily driver and has maybe 150 miles of off-road use, although I purchased it used and can't speak to the first 18K of life. Tires are measured at 34/32 PSI (TMPS reads 2 PSI higher, which appears to be normal from reading here), although this issue was worse when pressure was closer to 40.
I've had to do an increased amount of driving recently and noticed that the suspension feels different and the truck seems to handle on-road worse than previously. At speeds of 45ish+ potholes, cracks, series of cracks, and recessed manhole covers cause a pretty extreme bouncing, jarring, loss of control type of sensation that is worse as the speed increases. This is especially worse if it only happens on one side and/or if the wheel is turned somewhat. It's kind of hard to describe, but the road imperfections seem to be transferring a lot of energy to the truck rather than being absorbed, and it creates this feeling like the tires are losing traction or skipping along the pavement for a brief period, and makes me feel that for a brief moment the truck isn't under control. Then the suspension settles down, everything 'catches', and it's all back to normal.
Is this what it feels like when the shocks need to be rebuilt? Or possibly some sort of steering issue? Or maybe nothing at all and I am just imagining it?
I've had to do an increased amount of driving recently and noticed that the suspension feels different and the truck seems to handle on-road worse than previously. At speeds of 45ish+ potholes, cracks, series of cracks, and recessed manhole covers cause a pretty extreme bouncing, jarring, loss of control type of sensation that is worse as the speed increases. This is especially worse if it only happens on one side and/or if the wheel is turned somewhat. It's kind of hard to describe, but the road imperfections seem to be transferring a lot of energy to the truck rather than being absorbed, and it creates this feeling like the tires are losing traction or skipping along the pavement for a brief period, and makes me feel that for a brief moment the truck isn't under control. Then the suspension settles down, everything 'catches', and it's all back to normal.
Is this what it feels like when the shocks need to be rebuilt? Or possibly some sort of steering issue? Or maybe nothing at all and I am just imagining it?