TeraFlex Falcon Shocks and Nexus Steering Stabilizer
#11
JK Enthusiast
Thread Starter
A couple things-
It's peculiar that they specify 25psi for tire pressure. That by itself will soften the ride and kinda withdraws TF from the overland/ DD crowd. I drive mine on the highway everyday, it needs more than 25psi to avoid tearing up the tires. Did you drop your pressure to get the full benefit of the ride quality?
I see they specify an oil for the shocks, is there a place to add oil on them?
I'm guessing the rears wouldn't work nicely with lower shock relocation/ skid plates.....that would be unfortunate because they look to have potential but those of us who have committed to cutting the stock mounts may be out of luck.
Keep us posted long term. Lots of these new products are great when they come out and then the 'new' wears off and they aren't what they were. I hope these are different.
It's peculiar that they specify 25psi for tire pressure. That by itself will soften the ride and kinda withdraws TF from the overland/ DD crowd. I drive mine on the highway everyday, it needs more than 25psi to avoid tearing up the tires. Did you drop your pressure to get the full benefit of the ride quality?
I see they specify an oil for the shocks, is there a place to add oil on them?
I'm guessing the rears wouldn't work nicely with lower shock relocation/ skid plates.....that would be unfortunate because they look to have potential but those of us who have committed to cutting the stock mounts may be out of luck.
Keep us posted long term. Lots of these new products are great when they come out and then the 'new' wears off and they aren't what they were. I hope these are different.
I don't know that you can add oil, but they specify Redline synthetic shock oil (I said Lucas Oil synthetic shock oil in my video, but they changed to Redline once production started, because it works better in cold temps). I think they mention the type of oil they used so you know what's in them and whats needed if they're ever rebuilt.
It's hard for me to say about the rear-lower shock mounts... if you can cut them to raise them, I guess you could always weld the right length mounts back on, using aftermarket & beefier mounts?
From what I've seen, I think these are a long term winner... they totally changed how my JKU drives and it's all for the better. The change was massive, not just a slight difference.
I've been pretty giddy about these things; especially after watching the Teraflex Falcon videos time and time again. The cool part is that I'm able to upgrade these to the 3.3's later on (if I'm so inclined).
For the time being, I'm running the Bilstein 5160's and have been for the past 3 years. It's been a great shock and coming from a cheap Rusty's brand monotube, it was a night and day difference. I'm hoping that I'll be able to find that same feeling once I put these on. Like I said... I can't wait!
For the time being, I'm running the Bilstein 5160's and have been for the past 3 years. It's been a great shock and coming from a cheap Rusty's brand monotube, it was a night and day difference. I'm hoping that I'll be able to find that same feeling once I put these on. Like I said... I can't wait!
#12
Super Moderator
I always wondered why some shocks were mounted this way, the body side down always seemed upside down from what I was used to seeing. Is there any advantage associated with putting them in that orientation?
#13
JK Enthusiast
Thread Starter
#14
JK Super Freak
I like the idea of the front shock. A lot! They put the reservoir right where I almost put mine because piggy backed my front reservoir always rubbed the tire no matter how I turned it.
The back reservoir, well I'm just not a fan. There reasoning is clear but they should go back to the drawing board and find another way. Part of me believes they wanted the reservoir where it could be seen for the ever growing mall crawler crowd. The rear reservoir is hanging down like a boat anchor even in their video showing how tough it is it's still a liability to get hung up on even if it can handle abuse. We go to great lengths to lift our jeeps and tummy tuck and raise control arm and shock mounts.
This is a huge step backwards except for mall crawlers who want to be showing their reservoirs...
The back reservoir, well I'm just not a fan. There reasoning is clear but they should go back to the drawing board and find another way. Part of me believes they wanted the reservoir where it could be seen for the ever growing mall crawler crowd. The rear reservoir is hanging down like a boat anchor even in their video showing how tough it is it's still a liability to get hung up on even if it can handle abuse. We go to great lengths to lift our jeeps and tummy tuck and raise control arm and shock mounts.
This is a huge step backwards except for mall crawlers who want to be showing their reservoirs...
#15
JK Enthusiast
Thread Starter
I like the idea of the front shock. A lot! They put the reservoir right where I almost put mine because piggy backed my front reservoir always rubbed the tire no matter how I turned it.
The back reservoir, well I'm just not a fan. There reasoning is clear but they should go back to the drawing board and find another way. Part of me believes they wanted the reservoir where it could be seen for the ever growing mall crawler crowd. The rear reservoir is hanging down like a boat anchor even in their video showing how tough it is it's still a liability to get hung up on even if it can handle abuse. We go to great lengths to lift our jeeps and tummy tuck and raise control arm and shock mounts.
This is a huge step backwards except for mall crawlers who want to be showing their reservoirs...
The back reservoir, well I'm just not a fan. There reasoning is clear but they should go back to the drawing board and find another way. Part of me believes they wanted the reservoir where it could be seen for the ever growing mall crawler crowd. The rear reservoir is hanging down like a boat anchor even in their video showing how tough it is it's still a liability to get hung up on even if it can handle abuse. We go to great lengths to lift our jeeps and tummy tuck and raise control arm and shock mounts.
This is a huge step backwards except for mall crawlers who want to be showing their reservoirs...
Last edited by Greg@RME; 02-07-2017 at 10:06 AM.
#16
Most people spin that shock around in the rear to protect that knob.
If you are crunching the shock body, move the shock up, there are a lot of option (like the Rockstars) that get the shock body up and out of the way.
If you are crunching the shock body, move the shock up, there are a lot of option (like the Rockstars) that get the shock body up and out of the way.
Big fan of Teraflex products. Those front shocks looks fantastic, but that rear design is the same poor design of Rancho's shocks. Meaning, keeping the shock body down and exposed is a huge no-no in my book. I crunched a 9000xl fairly quickly-- that cheap plastic knob, and then on another trip, the shock body itself. That location is simply too vulnerable. I'm especially interested to see how many people running the reservoirs back there suffer the same fate.
I'd like to hear a justification why it was designed that way.
edit-- I watched the video response posted below. Very impressive. I was so annoyed at the poor design of Rancho that I assumed TF would suffer the same fate. I admit I'm likely wrong. The fact that they strengthened the lower portion of the shock is very impressive. I'm not 100% convinced that it's the best design, but I do like that this specific issue is addressed. A Rooster tail guard, or even a plastic sleeve could rectify the danger of rock chips on the shaft.Attachment 666123
I'd like to hear a justification why it was designed that way.
edit-- I watched the video response posted below. Very impressive. I was so annoyed at the poor design of Rancho that I assumed TF would suffer the same fate. I admit I'm likely wrong. The fact that they strengthened the lower portion of the shock is very impressive. I'm not 100% convinced that it's the best design, but I do like that this specific issue is addressed. A Rooster tail guard, or even a plastic sleeve could rectify the danger of rock chips on the shaft.Attachment 666123
#17
JK Enthusiast
Thread Starter
A couple things-
It's peculiar that they specify 25psi for tire pressure. That by itself will soften the ride and kinda withdraws TF from the overland/ DD crowd. I drive mine on the highway everyday, it needs more than 25psi to avoid tearing up the tires. Did you drop your pressure to get the full benefit of the ride quality?
It's peculiar that they specify 25psi for tire pressure. That by itself will soften the ride and kinda withdraws TF from the overland/ DD crowd. I drive mine on the highway everyday, it needs more than 25psi to avoid tearing up the tires. Did you drop your pressure to get the full benefit of the ride quality?
The 25 psi recommendation is simply there to let you know what tire pressure these shocks had been tuned at. They aren't recommending that your run 25 psi ONLY, on the road or off road. It is simply a Baseline so you have a number to compare to, when the shocks were tuned by the manufacturer.
Talking to Joe, the idea of mentioning the tire pressure was debated by more than a couple people. It sounds like they realized there would be some confusion with this mention, in my opinion I'm thinking that they could have worded the 25 psi statement a little bit better.
#18
Super Moderator
#19
Super Moderator
I talked to Joe at Teraflex today about the tire pressure question, his answer was very informative and I hope I can pass the information on so that it makes sense.
The 25 psi recommendation is simply there to let you know what tire pressure these shocks had been tuned at. They aren't recommending that your run 25 psi ONLY, on the road or off road. It is simply a Baseline so you have a number to compare to, when the shocks were tuned by the manufacturer.
Talking to Joe, the idea of mentioning the tire pressure was debated by more than a couple people. It sounds like they realized there would be some confusion with this mention, in my opinion I'm thinking that they could have worded the 25 psi statement a little bit better.
The 25 psi recommendation is simply there to let you know what tire pressure these shocks had been tuned at. They aren't recommending that your run 25 psi ONLY, on the road or off road. It is simply a Baseline so you have a number to compare to, when the shocks were tuned by the manufacturer.
Talking to Joe, the idea of mentioning the tire pressure was debated by more than a couple people. It sounds like they realized there would be some confusion with this mention, in my opinion I'm thinking that they could have worded the 25 psi statement a little bit better.
They've differentiated 2dr and 4dr so why wouldn't they put in a weight category vs the recommended tire pressure? It seems a little odd to me but then again we rate shock length by "generic lift" instead of collapsed/ extended length as it should be.
#20
JK Enthusiast
Thread Starter
TF has gotten much better with their customer service and answering the phones. It's interesting that they'd put that number out, it should be tucked away in the instructions somewhere. Maybe it's just me but I'd think the weight of the vehicle would be a little more crucial than the tire pressure if they're going to set a ride quality baseline.
They've differentiated 2dr and 4dr so why wouldn't they put in a weight category vs the recommended tire pressure? It seems a little odd to me but then again we rate shock length by "generic lift" instead of collapsed/ extended length as it should be.
They've differentiated 2dr and 4dr so why wouldn't they put in a weight category vs the recommended tire pressure? It seems a little odd to me but then again we rate shock length by "generic lift" instead of collapsed/ extended length as it should be.