Heres the deal:
I purchased a suspension kit from DPGOffroad.com. The kit came well recommended by a lot of folks on Jeepforum and other sites. The point of their setup is all about LCG (Low Center of Gravity) kits, rigs running 35" tires on as little as 2-2.5" of lift. The kits all use Old Man Emu for springs and shocks.
When I first took it off road, i unseated and completely lost my front coil. I noticed the axle was off center and the bumpstop shaft was pushing it out. I installed the kit's JKS adjustable trac bar and centered it and drilled 2 bolts at the bottom of the spring seat to act as a way to secure the spring ( i lost the spring a few more times before doing that).
Here is my issue, a few of my wheeling buddies are 100% sure that I am not running the correct size springs for the shocks I am running. The kit came with long travel shocks. They are arguing that the moment the spring becomes unseated, the droop i get is wasted "flex" as there is no longer any fore pushing down on the drooped tire. They say I need to run 4" springs or a progressive spring that would not become unseated. I called DPG about this and they guy flat told me - in a near cocky way- that this was just a bunch of bull and the reason they thought that was because no one understands LCG rigs and that everyone has been brainwashed by the "big lift" market and that the market is just now starting to come around to the LCG world. He said basically if I went up to a 4" spring, i would mess with stability and mess with geometry and essentially lose all the positive points that LCG offers, and if i ran shorter shocks, i would lose the droop my long travel shocks provided. He also said it didn't matter if the drooped wheel didnt have a spring pushing on it since I have a locked front so i wouldn't lose traction. My friends are COMPLETELY against his theory...one in particular calling him an idiot...saying that the low end with no spring load is no good for traction.
Can someone tell me who is right?
here are some pics. You can see here at near full flex the spring has a 3-4" gap above it, so nothing would be "pushing" down on the drooped side:
Again showing the spring with clearance above it. DPG noted, the bumpstops they use are not the same as mine. Mine extend the shaft while theres are placed on the plate which is better as mine cause the spring to come in contact with the extended shaft which could cause it to pop the spring out.