RobertN
Super Member
Re: \'05 Diesel pickup independent comparison test
I'm not so sure they're manly girl coils. The same basic setup works very well in the Dodge. And, the 60's-early 70's Bronco worked pretty well too.
If you disconnect the sway bar, the axle articulation is excellent with the coil suspension, for off road work. Not that a 3/4 ton crew-cab longbed is very manueverable on the trail(I was born in a Jeep, '42 MB Ford wartime version of the Willy's). I have had my trucks in tight places that surprised a lot of people, but they are pretty limited...
The best thing you can do for the F250 IFS is go get a Dana-60 straight axle, hub to hub with rotors and calipers, from a wrecker or someone parting one out. For the most part, the IFS just unbolts and the straight axle bolts right in. When I did my '89 F250, I had my springs re-arched with a tiny bit of extra height, and an extra leaf for when I hauled an 11' cabover camper. The straight axle worked like, like a straight axle should /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
I'm not so sure they're manly girl coils. The same basic setup works very well in the Dodge. And, the 60's-early 70's Bronco worked pretty well too.
If you disconnect the sway bar, the axle articulation is excellent with the coil suspension, for off road work. Not that a 3/4 ton crew-cab longbed is very manueverable on the trail(I was born in a Jeep, '42 MB Ford wartime version of the Willy's). I have had my trucks in tight places that surprised a lot of people, but they are pretty limited...
The best thing you can do for the F250 IFS is go get a Dana-60 straight axle, hub to hub with rotors and calipers, from a wrecker or someone parting one out. For the most part, the IFS just unbolts and the straight axle bolts right in. When I did my '89 F250, I had my springs re-arched with a tiny bit of extra height, and an extra leaf for when I hauled an 11' cabover camper. The straight axle worked like, like a straight axle should /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif