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Thread: Sway Bars?

  1. #1
    Junior Member Looking for Dirt SKIUTAHJEEP's Avatar
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    Sway Bars?

    I am going on the white rim trail at Moab June 10th. I have never disconnected my sway bars... do you guys think its needed on this trail? Will it increase my chances of rear rubbing of the fender? I am new to this Jeep thing so I will have a lot of questions so take it easy on me. Click image for larger version. 

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    Senior Member Getting Dirty hoaxci5's Avatar
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    Others may disagree, but I don't think it's worth the risk to disconnect our sway bars. I haven't done that trail and really know nothing about it, but I just did some pretty decent trails in Big Bear with both my sway bars connected and had no issues.

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    Junior Member Looking for Dirt SKIUTAHJEEP's Avatar
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    Hoaxci5, thanks for the comment. Can someone tell me what the risks are?

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    Senior Member Getting Dirty hoaxci5's Avatar
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    From my understanding if the front end drops down too much you can tear up your CV's. The swaybar helps keep it from dropping down too far.

    In the rear I've heard of the spring popping out of place.. not sure how much a concern that really is.. but for what little bit of extra travel it would give I'm not worried about it. Until there is something I come across that gives me issues I'll just leave mine hooked up.

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    Senior Member Getting Dirty superacerc's Avatar
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    Disconnecting the front swaybars runs the risk of letting your cv joint have too great of an angle. They are only meant to operate up to a certain degree and with no swaybars the wheel can drop as far as the strut will permit it to do so possibly damaging the strut as well as well as the cv joint. Just in case a cv joint is the constant velocity joint on your front axle shafts that allows your front wheel to turn and still pull the vehicle along. As far as the rear swaybar goes it wont really hurt anything. The wheels can travel more and will not tip your vehicle into a teeter totter as easily as it would leaving it connected. I have the ome spring lift on my xk which is stiffer than stock so I never have reconnected my sway bar in the rear since taking it off the first time I hit some tehnical trails. Without stiffer spri.vs however it is pretty dangerous to drive the xk on the street too quickly with either set disconnected. That doesn't mean you can't go on the street for short distances at a slower pace so a slow trip into town with the rear disconnected shouldn't. E too dangerous as long as you are careful. I love having the rear disconnected offroad and it does offer some benefits however as hoaxci5 mentioned the xk is quite capable without removing them at all.
    2007 Commander 4.7L, QTII, OEM Towing Option, tow hooks, 2"OME + 1/4" rusty's leveling spacer, Bilstein 5150 Rear Shks, Rear sway bar removed, 4xguard front skid, Offroad Unlimited Defender Roof Rack, Hella 500FF lights, 265/70/R17 BFG KM2 M/Ts 1.5" Rough Country Wheel Spacers
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    Member Looking for Dirt bigmaninds's Avatar
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    This is what happens to the front as well with too much travel, I have both front and rear sway bars removed. I do have Old Man Emu suspension so stiffer springs

    Last edited by bigmaninds; 05-19-2011 at 09:49 PM. Reason: added words

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    Lifetime Member Getting Dirty Matt's Avatar
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    If you have stock rear shocks, disconnecting the rear sway bar wont really do anything because the shock will reach its travel limit before the sway bar becomes the limiting factor. If you have longer rear shocks then disconnecting the rear will help.... but you need to be careful; anything over ~2" longer than stock is when you'll have issues with the brake line tightened up and the spring possibly falling out, so limiting straps and brake line extension/mods are required.

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    Junior Member Looking for Dirt SKIUTAHJEEP's Avatar
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    I put on the RR shock. Has anyone disconnected the rear sway bar with these shocks without doing a break line mod? ( I will for sure stay away from the front sway bar, thanks)

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    Lifetime Member Getting Dirty Matt's Avatar
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    How long are those shocks fully extended?

    You can use a floor Jack to test it out. Lift up the left front from the frame area until the left rear tire is just off the ground (With sway bar connected) and measure the shock length. Then lower it down, disconnect the sway bar and jack it up again but pay attention to the brake line and spring. When the wheel is off the ground measure the shock again to see if disconnecting the sway bar is giving you more travel. This will also tell you if you're in the safe range for you spring seat and brake lines.

  10. #10
    Senior Member Getting Dirty hoaxci5's Avatar
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    Would using the floor jack be enough to simulate a fully stuffed rear tire with full extension on the other side? I'm just trying to figure out if the jack test is just a rough idea or if its full travel?

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