SS adjustable panhard didn't center axle.
So my left rear tire is noticeably sticking out more than the right rear tire. A good inch or so. Bought the adjustable bar to fix it. No brackets. Followed the instructions and the left rear is still noticeably out further.
I'm wondering if I can take the bar off and lift the rear and set it back down to center the axle and adjust the panhard bar to fit whatever that would Messure. Would this be OK to do? Centering the axle is the whole point of the adjustable bar right? Would anything else be causing the left tire to pop out like that? Also my mind is telling me to shorten the bar to pull in the left side more but that would make the adjustable bar shorter than the original. Is that correct? I did follow his directions correctly and used the more accurate "cut an inch" methard. Bonus question. When I add an aftermarket bumper and tire rack in a couple of months would I have to re adjust the bar again to make up for the added weight? About 200 lbs. Thank you guys! |
Are you lifted?
The longer bar is to push the axle to driver side when lifted. When lifted the bar is at more of an angle down, thus swinging the axle to the passenger side. If your not lifted or the bar sits pretty level, slight down angle, at ride height, then a longer bar would push the axle too far to the driver side. I’ve never played with an adjustable, but if I did, I’d adjust it so the axle was centered at ride height, and maybe even lean toward the shorter side of things to keep the driveline off the gas tank at full drivers wheel compression. You can undo the bar on the adjustable end. Then use a ratchet strap from axle to frame to pull the axle to center. Then adjust the bar to fit and bolt it up. Adjust from there. |
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That's bazzar that it was pushed to the drivers side with the oem bar after i put in the lift.. I figured it should of been pushed to the passenger side which is why I am confused. Seems like I have to make the adjustable bar shorter than the oem bar to pull it to the passenger side. |
???
The axle will be furthest to driver side when the Panhard bar is level. Any other orientation of the bar below or above level should move the axle to the passenger side. A lift should have moved your axle to the passenger side. |
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what...... .I was thinking of a 2 inch OME lift and I was told it would not effect anything like axel placement...that might make me rethink my lift as I dont want to get into those games. I was told only when you get to 3 inch lift. Hmmm...guess I need to do more research |
Any lift changes the angle of the stock panhard therefore affects axle position. When I did my SS panhard ( done sametime as lift) I measured the position pre lift, did the springs and shocks. Mreasured and calculated the change. Then set the SS to anticipated length and installed. Took it in for alignment and put it on the lift to full droop. Sat it back down measured and had the shop repeat the lift and adjust until it was centered ( took 3 up and downs total). My panhard is nearly horizontal on flat level ground. I believe they call it a shakedown.
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But the OME 2 inch lift has been great man I love it and would recommend it. Although I do wish I would of went with a 3 inch lift tbh. I just didn't want to deal with adjusting the springs and absorbers. She is also my daily driver. The rear was super easy. Front took a little time cause i wanted to cut corners. If you do get the OME lift or anyone reading this who is going to buy it note that the front coilovers are not side specific but the rear springs are! |
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1. Since a rear lift higher than stock shifts the axle to the passenger side, I'm thinking there's something else going on. 2. Was the axle centered when you had stock suspension and shift to the left after you installed 906? Even with a 3" lift, the amount of lateral axle shift is minimal & the amount of panhard adjustment is less than 1/4" from the stock bar. 3. Following SS instructions, you did subtract an inch from your total panhard measurement correct? |
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Yeah the ss panhard was just a tad longer than the stock one. I did follow his directions carefully and started at the one inch mark for best accuracy. It was pushing left with the stock panhard before hand. I did mess around with it some yesterday. I unbolted frame end of the panhard, unbolted the sway bar and jacked the back end of the frame up. Both tires measured the same distance from the frame at that point. Lowered it back down slowly and the axle shifted back left some. I ended up man handling the rear axle and frame the best i could to align it. Well align the tires with the frame. I got it close but not spot on. I know that in order to get it as close as i did i had to make the ss panhard SHORTER than the stock panhard. I know something isnt right but i dont know what. Everything looked good to me.. Off topic: can you post some pics of your custom bolt on rock sliders? I'm going to be in the market for something like that after soon. |
Is there any chance that your original pan hard bar was not the oem? Could it have been monkeyed with before you bought it? Did the PO remove a tall lift before you got it?
Failing the above I wonder if your bar mounts are bent somehow. |
what is the center to center dimension of the Panhard bar mount holes (axle to frame side) with the Panhard bar removed?
- repeat what you did: removing one end of the Panhard bar, lifting the truck, and allowing it to settle, then measure the distance between the holes. Also, is there a chance some PO put a wheel spacer on the driver's rear to make the tires sit similarly in the wheel wells? |
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