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FIFY !The stock shock buckets can't handle dip shít, ignorant youtube influencers masquerading as suspension engineers
That's why I went with an HM kit to remove all the issues Ford gave us raptor owners when pushing the edge off-road.FIFY !
I only watch youtube videos with shocked facial expressions and bright backgrounds for the thumbnail.Ford gave us far, far fewer compromises than folks who update a single or few components of the suspension --system--, without concern for what other impacts those changes have. Which keep it dirty pretty much admitted. Finally. The chain is only as strong as its weakest link and if you put something in that changes that equation, something else is going to fail. You can never make it 100% failure free, you can only potentially improve it within a specific range.
The problem the “youtube / instagram influencer” engineers introduce is they decide what is the weakest component ignorantly OR they make poor life choices like “I know I don’t need it, but I like how the truck looks with a 3” lift, so we’ll incorporate that into the design”. Then they complain about the truck’s behavior, rationalize why their modification is not at fault, no way, no how because they’re SUPREMELY KNOWLEDGEABLE, and you should believe them because they have <insert number> of followers on social media. People fall for this.
I’ll admit as well, there are ... a lot of windows in my house, so to speak. I did exactly what I’m pointing out above on my Raptor Stereo and would have saved about a grand if I’d upgraded the sound as a system, rather than try to piece meal update what I thought needed done. Lesson hopefully learned.
So... Don’t skimp, AMIRITE?People have been over-driving F150's in the desert since the I-beam was invented. There wasn't an instagram around to post the latest "Yard Sale", (aka parts-shredding crash), back then. I've bottomed out hard enough to force dual Rancho rebuildable shocks right through the shock mounts, I've had the driveshaft fall out, bent the axle, etc, on modified 2wd trucks for decades. Our class 1400 (back-halfed 2wd Ranger with 20",front & 28" rear travel) had $50K in fab work & parts; it could survive impacts hard enough for us to see stars yet it didn't break. We once went end over end and landed so hard on the roof that the weight of the fuel actually bent the fuel cell UP, & the roof panel was shaped like the granite it hit. Both helmets were cracked, harnesses were stretched, and I had a concussion, but the cage definitely saved us from major head injuries.
My conclusion: A regular f150 was designed and tested to cycle around 7-8" front, maybe a ilttle more in back, on a 28-30" tire.. The Raptor version uses the same basic geometry+better dampening to roughly double that, on 35's.. From that point beyond, slight modifications creates a slight improvement, but shock buckets, steering racks, and A-arm brackets are ALL the weakest link. If you go beyond that, but don't plan on spending $$$ for the H&M-level upgrades, you'll be breaking the truck and maybe tasting your own blood on impact. When THAT happens, you're going to wish you had a cage.