True, but this does not mean that digressive shocks do not have their place. Sway bars, for example are not that helpful with brake dive and squat. In an overall well-designed package, digressive shocks are but a piece of the puzzle that helps with on-road stability and performance.This is SO misunderstood by many in the hobby and I'm glad you called this out. The expected body roll like trucks in the 90s is just not a thing anymore on an IFS truck with modern front/rear sways.
I admit this is true for me, although I'm trying to learn. Just a lot to catch up on. And most of it involves math.But let's face it, for at least half of us we just get what we get and are $sold$ without really understanding the real differences between these designs...
A person can grasp it without the math. For example, the person I replied to mentioned the 'expected body roll of trucks of the 90's' and how sway bar's mitigate that today. However, most can understand that the Bronco does not have the same spring rates as a typical pickup sold today. In that the Bronco is 'under-sprung and over-damped' from the factory. That's why it squats so easily with weight, can't tow much, etc. Being under-sprung compared to a pickup or normal road car is intentional - it allows it to articulate off road in the expected manner. The sway bars and digressive shocks help mitigate the springs on road so that it handles there as well. A trade off 'fixing' a trade off, etc...I admit this is true for me, although I'm trying to learn. Just a lot to catch up on. And most of it involves math.
I am going to keep beating this horse for coilovers with mechanically fixed spring rates. Not possible to swap in different mechanical springs will driving over different terrain, so clever use of damping is the only possible adjustment. Unfortunately spring rates dominate the response and are a more powerful adjustment knob.With so much adjustment I would have thought that "dialing it in" would be a straightforward affair.
Displacements (suspension handling) and forces (ride comfort) are DIAMETRICALLY APPOSED. Physics dictates it is NOT possible to adjust damping to “DIAL IN” a one size fits all solution.
Howdy what shock would you purchase?I've had various Bilsteins over the years and they are fabulous at faster speeds but suck at daily speeds. Mine were usually worn out with significant ride degradation after 18 mths.
Won't buy another Bilstein.
You are not going to beat custom tuned shocks, such as the ones being gone through in this video, or the ones Accu-Tune does for their own Ride Shocks , or say a King or a Fox. The owner of the vehicle can tune the ride for what is most important to them. They all have compromises for the masses as a trade off. For the price difference, which is a pretty good you can have them gear them toward your ride preference, both shock tuning and spring rate.So what is the best shock for crawling slow then? Stock?