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#1 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2003
Member # 21821
Location: Texas
Posts: 3
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IFS strength?
If I'm only looking to do trails, how strong is IFS in say holding up to 33-36" tires?
Anyway to get lift out of em besides cranking Tbars? i sthere a kit?
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C:\Dos C:\Dos Run Run\Dos\Run "Don't democrats cause cancer?" --Homer Simpson |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Member # 20695
Location: BC Canada
Posts: 188
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I'm running 33" tires, locked front & rear, and beat the shit out of my rig daily and it stands up fine. Never broken a CV, but ripped a few boots on my CV's from the crappy angles. Go to Matt's website and you'll learn tons, and I'd also suggest giving him a call. I'd be cautious going up to 35" tires on the IFS... 33"s seem to be the safe max for reliability.
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89 Trooper Supercrew 283/SM465/np205 twinstick burning BBQ juice on 37"s |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Member # 20564
Location: Denton Texas
Posts: 152
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I have 32" super swamper tsl sx's and it ripped out the birfields first time off road.
lifted IFS SUCKS is a total waste of money, and messes up the suspension geometry something aweful. I would put max at 31x10.50s Street only. or an occasional cow pasture.
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86 Topless Turbo Diesel Trooper SAS SOA Custom Alum Dash, Cage, Dana 44 front, Detroit ezlocker, Zoo 12 bolt rear Lincoln Locker, cherokee springs, Alum radiator, 36" Super swampers, Stack & Snorkle, VDO gauges -- 2001 Dodge Ram 2500 4x4 Cummins Superchips, K&N, TST j-hook, transgo VDO gauges Last edited by AirTrooper; 08-08-2003 at 04:54 PM. |
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#4 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2001
Member # 7224
Location: richmond, va
Posts: 492
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Quote:
moderately lift the frontif you must...2-2.5"....matt sells kits, and provides great tech support....but you can learn everything on the internet without making phonecalls...lift is achieved with cranking t-bars, and gaining some "droop" with balljoint relocation and spacer, and lo-pro bumpstops if your not rock crawling, ifs works great, when you start changing the geometry, some maitainence issues typically arise in older trucks (bushings, balljoints, etc.) i say go with it until your ready to commit to something solid
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i got nothing Last edited by james west; 08-08-2003 at 08:58 PM. |
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#5 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
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Quote:
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79 cj5 on tons |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2001
Member # 6359
Location: Placer County, CA Where the Green Grass Grows
Posts: 1,661
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IFS and 33"s
4runner with ARBs f/r and stock IFS went through the Rubicon fine last year (Jeff the Marmot). He's been runnin that way for a while. They tell me backing up, bound up kills em'. Rolling backwards and dropping the clutch is kool, also. Wedging your tire against an imovable object, with the wheel turned and the throttle floored works also. I say drive with forethought and purpose, and run em till you know you need something stronger. I gather that the Isuzu IFS is comparable to the Toy. My shop-built front Toy SAS cost more than my rig did
Enjoy the IFS and drive easy, watch the "built rigs" with un-built drivers break all their shiazzz
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not surprized yer confused yer face was burried in the pillow pretty deep as gizim drunk as you were |
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#7 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2002
Member # 10124
Location: Fort Liquordale
Posts: 2,315
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Quote:
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I crashed that piece of shit...and then stepped away....... |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Member # 20564
Location: Denton Texas
Posts: 152
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On the trooper the outer is a CV the inner is a birfield. TAke a look
And it was not anything to do with the ring and pinion or carrier that failed. It has been axles. The trooper front end is very weak when torsion bars are cranked and front axles are at extreme angles. I had Matt's parts, flipped ball joints, ball joint spacers, short snubbers. They are all show and not serious off road hardware. Camber is horrible but some people want the inexpensive lifted look for blvd cruising. The last two troopers Matt has run have SAS. I'm sure he will tell you a fully cranked trooper at 2 or 2.5 " has the axles at extreme angles, and won't last in serious off roading.
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86 Topless Turbo Diesel Trooper SAS SOA Custom Alum Dash, Cage, Dana 44 front, Detroit ezlocker, Zoo 12 bolt rear Lincoln Locker, cherokee springs, Alum radiator, 36" Super swampers, Stack & Snorkle, VDO gauges -- 2001 Dodge Ram 2500 4x4 Cummins Superchips, K&N, TST j-hook, transgo VDO gauges Last edited by AirTrooper; 08-09-2003 at 08:29 PM. |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Registered User
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They'll do fine for most stuff. Extreme rockcrawling, no, but for doing the local bog or some trails it'll hold for a while. Matt's parts don't really make it stronger, just give you some travel back after cranking.
If you want to keep the ifs go with a 3" body, 2" crank and shackles and some 33's. You can get 2" drop diff plates to keep the cv's straight (from trooper4life) and some tie rod shields from joe darlington to keep those from blowing and you'll be ready for anything except competition. You'll have about 6-8" of travel in the front and good flex out back. Weld up the rear and tackle the trail. I'm trying to keep my IFS and I'm trying to make a 4-5" drop diff with 2nd gen a-arms, cv's and spindles with some cross-linked air shocks and a spring over in the rear. It should end up working about as good as a low-lift SAS. CV's really aren't as hard to change as people think. If you have some dough and skills and tools, by all means go ahead and tread the trodden SAS trail. Paul
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79 cj5 on tons |
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#11 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Member # 20564
Location: Denton Texas
Posts: 152
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disagree about everything but extreme rock crawling.
Ours were destroyed in pretty mild climbing at Marshall Creek here north of fort worth. If you have the talent to do drop plates and can weld, you can do SAS.
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86 Topless Turbo Diesel Trooper SAS SOA Custom Alum Dash, Cage, Dana 44 front, Detroit ezlocker, Zoo 12 bolt rear Lincoln Locker, cherokee springs, Alum radiator, 36" Super swampers, Stack & Snorkle, VDO gauges -- 2001 Dodge Ram 2500 4x4 Cummins Superchips, K&N, TST j-hook, transgo VDO gauges |
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#12 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2001
Member # 7224
Location: richmond, va
Posts: 492
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if your were breaking IFS in "mild" stuff, you were doing something wrong.....
the guy who started this thread said he wanted to do trails, not ARCA competition i had mine airborn, and did some stoopid shit with it...never broke ...and that was fully tweeked up front with all the shit to gain travel, including homemade 1/2" spacersbut i wouldnt try to drop the axle and shit, just SAS it, it WILL work better, and its easier...unless you walker evens or something but dont do a bodylift, fucks up center of gravity and looks dumb...just cut the sheetmetal to make whatever tires you want fit.....thats my ultimate suggestion, forget all the lift on the IFS, keep it stock and reliable...just cut the metal
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i got nothing Last edited by james west; 08-10-2003 at 08:31 PM. |
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#13 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2002
Member # 10124
Location: Fort Liquordale
Posts: 2,315
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I broke TWO half shafts in under a year...with no lift and 30x9.50's. Roll it like ya stole it.
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I crashed that piece of shit...and then stepped away....... |
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#14 (permalink) | |
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Wheeler
Join Date: May 2000
Member # 1005
Location: Almost Idaho
Posts: 168
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Quote:
) The inner joint is a Double Offset Joint. The DOJ allows for angles and length changes as the suspension cycles.More useless Isuzu trivia for ya. Michael |
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#15 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2002
Member # 11425
Location: sananto
Posts: 1,365
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i wheel a Kia Sportage, which, i figure is built at LEAST a little weaker than a Trooper due to the difference in weight and projected buyers, anyway, my point is, i rockcrawl some pretty serious stuff as often as i can and have, to date, only blown one CV. granted, i don't have lockers front and rear but i do have a rear Eaton posi and i use my brakes to keep both axles turning the same speed and direction as often as i can. i have blown a couple hubs as well, but i would imagine since i built a lot more droop into my IFS and didn't drop the diff, and i crawl a lotta rocks and i'm running 32's, that i would have broken more stuff by now, but it just hasn't happened, could be that i don't normally throttle it much unless i have to, but who knows? i do know it takes a lot to blow a CV, i was fully flexed, right tire drooped all the way and turned left at full lock, then i jammed on the gas and the tire was spinning when it came down to the ground. as soon as it touched, the inner CV crown just walked out the back of the CV cup, spilling all the balls and sounding like a shotgun discharge.
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[I][SIZE="1"][COLOR="Silver"]"do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law"[/COLOR][/SIZE][/I] |
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#16 (permalink) |
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Registered User
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You could do a 2"susp lift (Indy4x, DOR, or Calmini) and drop the diff 1.5-2" (Trooper4life) to straighten your axle back out. You could then do the ball joint flip (Indy4x, DOR, or Calmini) to fix what minimal camber issues you'd have...that can drop and stuff 32x11.50 with ease at max deviation, cut away a little to fit 33's. I put a 3"BL on mine, and it does fawk it up, i'm still trying to find the source of strange sounds. And it you leave the t-bars cranked without correcting the cv angle, you will rip cv boots...both my inner boots were ripped in 2 weeks. Also, get manual hubs, so that your cv shafts aren't spinning unless you're wheel'n, saves cv boots, ect.
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#17 (permalink) |
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Registered User
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When i was runnin skinny 33's w/ just t-bar crankage and long ass shackles, I used to beat the shit out of it and NEVER broke anything (besides the engine). I hooked up to a pole that my buddy wanted out of his yard. about 8" in diameter. I had it in 4 low, reverse, dumping the clutch at big rpms. no probs. couldn't get the pole out tho
Run it till ya break it and then go SAS. oh yeah, don't for get the manual hubs up front. they will help keep the ifs alive longer.
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79 cj5 on tons |
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#18 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2001
Member # 5716
Location: Littleton, CO
Posts: 419
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You don't really say what rig you have with an IFS. Most people that have been responding have been talking about troopers.
I have a 1999 Amigo, with about 3 inches of 'crank' on the t-bars and corresponding lift in the rear and I am running 33s. There are a NUMBER of other people that have the same setup and at least a couple that run 35s, with NO significant front end damage to speak of (power steering seals not included). There are also a number of trooper owners that show up each year at Moabzu with tires that *seem* to be a lot bigger than stock (32s and 33s). They manage to wheel the snot out of their rigs on hard trails and don't break anything. I don't know exactly why AirTrooper had problems with his trooper, but I would count that as a minority opinion, certainly not what I have seen over the last 4 or so years at Moabzu, Crawloween, ColoradoZu, etc. Oh, and I don't exactly baby the Amigo either :
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Jeff M. |
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#19 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Member # 20564
Location: Denton Texas
Posts: 152
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"if your were breaking IFS in "mild" stuff, you were doing something wrong..... "
so according to the original post, your telling this guy he can run 33 to 36" tires with cranked torsion bars and if anything breaks, he will also "be doing something wrong" I'm outa here...
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86 Topless Turbo Diesel Trooper SAS SOA Custom Alum Dash, Cage, Dana 44 front, Detroit ezlocker, Zoo 12 bolt rear Lincoln Locker, cherokee springs, Alum radiator, 36" Super swampers, Stack & Snorkle, VDO gauges -- 2001 Dodge Ram 2500 4x4 Cummins Superchips, K&N, TST j-hook, transgo VDO gauges Last edited by AirTrooper; 08-12-2003 at 11:13 PM. |
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#20 (permalink) |
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StinkyFab Racing
Join Date: May 2001
Member # 4946
Location: San Diego
Posts: 6,146
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Funny thing airtrooper, you seem to be the only one here complaining.
Anything you do to modify your rig can have effects on reliability, but IMHO the 10 bolt front end is pretty decent. I ran 32s on mine with the front end absolutely maxed out for about a year of almost constant abuse both off road, and on road delivering pizzas, and I never broke a CV and tore only 1 boot. The tie rods and CVs are definitely the weak points, and i've seen plenty of em break, but in general you should be ok. I'm a lot more worried about blowing up shafts in my front 44 with 37s than i was with the stock IFS and 32s. Also your comments about alignment dont make sense to me, I had my front end cranked over 3" and with the spacers I was still able to align it. sounds like someone is just bitter to me ![]() Dallas
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Dallas Ashley StinkyFab Racing (SFR) - Custom Fabrication Your Source for: CNC Cutting & Engraving, Cages, Custom Suspension, Complete Vehicle Builds, and more! Overall Winner, 2012 KOH EMC. Gettin it done in a stocker! Co-Dog #4432-KOH 2011 #88-KOH 2010, Crew Chief - KOH 2009, 2008 |
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#21 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
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Quote:
STFU NOOB! ![]() I dont see what you are crying about man, I ,like Jeff, run 33s, run 4+ on a 5 scale and 9 on a 10 scale trails routinely, and have done well. You should be able to run 33s without a problem on most anything IFS Isuzu. Some exceptions, but I wont go into those. The 10 bolt holds up well.
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Keith "Fuck em... they can eat a bowl of dicks for all I care!" - KE ______ "Bowl of dicks?" - MB "Yep, bowl of dicks!" - KE ______ "Damn thats a regular cornucopia of cock!" - MB |
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#22 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2003
Member # 17350
Location: Noblesville,In
Posts: 48
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I have the Indy 4x 3" susp. lift on my Rodeo and wheeled all the time.Not doing extreme stuff but trail riding and having fun and it took me a whole lot of stupidity to break anything and it was the spider gears NOT the CV's.Both CV's were fine and I grenaded the diff.So I guess what I am saying is Yes 33's will be fine and AirTrooper is
So see ya
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I only support gay marriage if both chicks are hot! [url]http://www.MWIOR.com/[/url] |
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#24 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Member # 20491
Location: Wichita KS
Posts: 133
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At Co 'Zu this weekend, us lifted Troopers and Amigos running 33's, ran some very tough trails. Like Holy Cross, Chinaman Gulch, Wheeler lake. No breakage, no broken cv's or tie rods. Pictures here. and here
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Troopers 89RS 33's & 90 3.4v6 SAS D44 5.38s ARB/12Bolt Hobart Revolution 3.07 4Low Cooper 35s |
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#25 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
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Quote:
My take on the situation? The isuzu 10bolt IFS is good for about 33's locked and 35's open. both situations would greatly benefit from a drop diff and some sort of tie rod beef. but no matter what you do, if you wheel it, time will catch up with you and you will break CVs. how soon and how often, depends on your driving style, but i promise you it will happen. I had have run both of those tire sizes on my Rodeo's IFS before going SAS. -Rob |
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