Whitd5
Senior Member
so looking to level the front of my truck. I’d like to get as much as I can without causing issues and then I’ll decide what to do with the rear. I had simple plans...Use the Bilstein 5100. My truck does not see off road at all. I pack my kids to school and drive to work, a good mix of highway and city driving. My last car was a lowered challenger r/t. It had all the extra bracing and handled like a dream, but was rough. I was ok with it. I don’t want my truck to be so rough though. So as I have researched of course I read about all the better and more expensive options, but I could easily overbuild on this truck because it just wouldn’t utilize a fancy suspension setup. After my mind ran wild for a bit, I have come back to my original plan of the 5100’s... or something similar like the Eibachs. I will eventually choose an uca to use but it’s not my highest priority as I’m hoping to not change the geometry much here.
So to my main question... it seems like these setups basically lift the trucks by pre-loading the spring. The 5100 will raise the spring seat up effectively loading the spring. The Eibach spring with the pro-kit is a longer spring so it has to be loaded to fit. People seem to talk badly about spacers... and I’m talking spring preload spacers... not strut spacers... but what is the big difference here?? Does the longer spring being compressed offer a benefit over just loading the stock spring?
I know too that the shock plays the main role in ride quality but I can’t help but think that the spring choice is going to make a difference.
I know there are a million threads discussing the different ways to do this. Sure I’ll take your opinions... but my main focus is getting info on how the different choices on loading the springs makes a difference.
Adding preload spacers vs raising the spring seat vs squeezing in longer springs.
So to my main question... it seems like these setups basically lift the trucks by pre-loading the spring. The 5100 will raise the spring seat up effectively loading the spring. The Eibach spring with the pro-kit is a longer spring so it has to be loaded to fit. People seem to talk badly about spacers... and I’m talking spring preload spacers... not strut spacers... but what is the big difference here?? Does the longer spring being compressed offer a benefit over just loading the stock spring?
I know too that the shock plays the main role in ride quality but I can’t help but think that the spring choice is going to make a difference.
I know there are a million threads discussing the different ways to do this. Sure I’ll take your opinions... but my main focus is getting info on how the different choices on loading the springs makes a difference.
Adding preload spacers vs raising the spring seat vs squeezing in longer springs.

