I may not be understanding what you are saying but I do know that the way they were mounted on the front of the stock spring were also cantilevered. The bracket was welded to the frame and the top of the shackle cantilevered off the bracket. It was not through bolted through the frame. Now it's just shifted to the rear of the spring instead of the front. The way this kit uses their brackets to bolt over the original mounting brackets makes the mounting position almost identical to the original position, just 1 inch lower. Neither the front nor the rear stock shackle were through frame mounted, both have brackets welded to the bottom of the frame and were cantilever mounted.
I said
running 2 inch lift shackles on the front of a stock set up would equate to a 10 inch overall shackle height that is mounted on the stock bracket that was welded to the bottom of the frame with the shackle mounting position cantilevered down 2 inches off the bottom of the frame is the same as...
a shackle reversal kit that mounts the spring perch over the existing mount that was welded to the bottom of the frame and cantilevered 2 inches off the bottom of the frame, is now cantilevered 3 inches down off the bottom of the frame. Not much different.
The stock front shackle is 4 inches center to center and the SR shackles are identical in length, 4 inches center to center. The difference being that now the front and the rear mounting brackets are cantilevered down 3 inches off the frame instead of 2 inches off the frame.
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It is scary, and anyone running shackles like that on the street should have their head examined.
Anyone running a stock set up with two inch lift shackles should have their head examined
??
I don't agree !
Yes their are drawbacks to every mod you do. The effects of the drawbacks very in degree and everyone must be able to live with their effects. There are a lot of people running 2 inch lift shackles and stuffing 33 under their Jeeps
"Look At Me With 33's"
and yes there are drawbacks as well as benefits.
John