Spring spacers

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Obwonkonobe

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I've currently got a 78 c10 2wd sitting stock height on 31s. I rebuilt the front suspention with autozone stuff, all oem, nothing fancy at all, went with a buddy and off roaded it the other day and got hooked. I'm looking to just put a couple inches in the front, maybe 2 or 3. I read about these coil spring spacers, and found a good deal

https://www.summitracing.com/parts/sps-1706

Although im wondering what kindof rabbit hole im going down. I need to know how this will affect my steering angle, if I need to redo my alignment, how hard would that be? I also need to know if i need to reshim the upper control arms affer this, and if i need upper ball jointspacers so i don't kill them, thanks. Here are some pics

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Rusty Nail

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I'm not convinced that an OEM shock absorber will accommodate more than 2 bonus inches.
That makes me wonder about the brake lines.
It's a Chevrolet...I say go for it and see what happens. If it breaks, fix it so it won't. :33:

I bet you can get away with two inches and the truck will never know the difference.:boti:
 

yevgenievich

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Alignment and shock travel would get affected. Steering will also get some some effect but should stay within reasonable range
 

Obwonkonobe

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Alignment and shock travel would get affected. Steering will also get some some effect but should stay within reasonable range

If I go with one at the spring and 2 at the fender, should I have it aligned? Or just send it
 

yevgenievich

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If I go with one at the spring and 2 at the fender, should I have it aligned? Or just send it

What do you mean by the 2 at the fender?
A set of one ton springs would give you a lift on the front as well. But it will depend on existing alignment spec. The camber change will be a positive. The amount of change depends on the geometry. There will also be some toe change but very minimal due to a relatively long tie rod length. You can calculate the change by measuring existing suspension geometry.
 
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Rusty Nail

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I bought new shocks very recently and the part number was the same for a 2 inch lift , as it is for stock.

Just sayin.
 

Obwonkonobe

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I bought new shocks very recently and the part number was the same for a 2 inch lift , as it is for stock.

Just sayin.

Lol that's all I needed to hear. And I would go with new springs but the po put new springs in too, I see no reason to buy another new set when for 20 bucks I can do the same thing
 

Craig 85

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I used air Lift air bags on two of my C20 trucks to fit 33's with minor trimming. I then ran the air lines through the holes in the front plate. I only had to have it re-aligned. It gave me about 2" of lift. Summit has them for $88. They fit inside the springs.
https://www.airliftcompany.com/shop/81560/

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Obwonkonobe

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I used air Lift air bags on two of my C20 trucks to fit 33's with minor trimming. I then ran the air lines through the holes in the front plate. I only had to have it re-aligned. It gave me about 2" of lift. Summit has them for $88. They fit inside the springs.
https://www.airliftcompany.com/shop/81560/

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I would but I'm going for cheap, plus if i do bags I'd put air on the truck too
 

yevgenievich

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Shocks work better when in designed work range. The main thing that stands out possibly more is the camber change. But that is easy to check with a regular angle meter when on level surface
 

Obwonkonobe

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Shocks work better when in designed work range. The main thing that stands out possibly more is the camber change. But that is easy to check with a regular angle meter when on level surface

What kindof angles should i be looking for?
 

yevgenievich

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What kindof angles should i be looking for?
For a truck suspension probably pretty close to 0°. Maybe just a bit negative around -0.3°.
I do not know the rate of camber change on the c10 relative to height, but it is not uncommon to have a 1° change in camber with 2" height difference
 

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