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Ride quality advice, 92 D350 dually

Old 08-15-2021 | 04:12 PM
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Ride quality advice, 92 D350 dually

I drove my truck to the Mopar Nats on fri and stayed through sat. Had a great time but I'd forgotten how stiff a 1 tone rides. The front has new Moog OEM spec coils and the rear is stock. Here's what I'm thinking, my tires are rated at 80psi. I'm sure they're close to that. Do you guys see a problem with lowering the psi in the duals? I can always air them up if I tow. How low can I go?


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Old 08-15-2021 | 05:13 PM
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That is a very nice ride, best bet is to put about 1000 lbs of weight in the back that should help and I wouldn't run over 50 lbs in your tires as long as they don't touch
Old 08-15-2021 | 05:25 PM
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Originally Posted by nonrev
That is a very nice ride, best bet is to put about 1000 lbs of weight in the back that should help and I wouldn't run over 50 lbs in your tires as long as they don't touch
The tires are 235/80r17s. There's a lot of space between the duals. I was thinking 40-60 psi so I'm on track. Thanks for the post and the props.
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Old 08-16-2021 | 10:32 AM
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I run 45 in the front and 55 in the rear when unloaded. If I'm hauling/pulling full gross, then I up the rears to 80psi. Me, I'm an old school die hard. If you want a car ride, buy a car. Leave a truck a truck.
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Old 08-18-2021 | 12:35 PM
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Very nice, red and black my favorite. Really like the body color grill.

Cougar, you must have a good back! And wear a kidney belt.

On my truck, admittedly way different, without a load I never run more than 60 in the front and with a steel shell on the back, 35-40 max rear. That's with 285 singles. Been doing that forever with good tire wear and safe handling.

On that dually, play with lower pressures. mark a chaulk line across the tread on the rears drive a straight road, pull off without turning check your marks. You want pretty even wear across the whole tread. If you get really low just make sure they don't overheat at freeway speeds.
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Old 08-18-2021 | 05:38 PM
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Originally Posted by bigredbrick
Very nice, red and black my favorite. Really like the body color grill.
Cougar, you must have a good back! And wear a kidney belt.
Not really, just use to it. Been driving the bricks sense 1971.

Old 08-20-2021 | 03:31 PM
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Originally Posted by cougar
I run 45 in the front and 55 in the rear when unloaded. If I'm hauling/pulling full gross, then I up the rears to 80psi.
Agreed. There's no reason to run anywhere near full air in the rear of an unladen truck. (unless of course its to deadhead to your next haul)

I ran my D250 with 30psi in the rear for a good long while when I just shuttling myself around with no payload. Definitely helps the ride, and also traction.

EDIT: Also, if you have overload leafs... be sure your main springs aren't sagged to the point where the OL's 'slap' the stops on bumps.
Old 08-20-2021 | 10:19 PM
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nice truck. do you actually use for towing? i would say running lower tire pressure when not hauling anything would help a bit. longer leaf springs would help give it a better ride but generally require you move the shackle and spring mount do so. could also remove a leaf spring or 2 and install air bags to compensate for the lost leafs if you need it to keep the tow capacity.
Old 08-21-2021 | 11:56 AM
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Kelderman air ride. If you weren't so far away I'd sell you mine.
Old 08-21-2021 | 03:02 PM
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Thoroughly pressure-wash the leaf-spring packs and let dry well. Then flood them with an aerosol heavy chain or wire-rope lube.
Such makes a surprising improvement. It's still a covered-wagon but, it takes the sharp edges off the bumps.
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Old 08-21-2021 | 06:29 PM
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Originally Posted by crazzywolfie
nice truck. do you actually use for towing? i would say running lower tire pressure when not hauling anything would help a bit. longer leaf springs would help give it a better ride but generally require you move the shackle and spring mount do so. could also remove a leaf spring or 2 and install air bags to compensate for the lost leafs if you need it to keep the tow capacity.
Thanks and yes I do. The last time I towed with it was before I started fixing dents. I drug my car hauler with a few cross ties across Cheat Mt. looking for a bed that wasn't so beat up. Never found one. Fixed what I had.
Old 08-21-2021 | 06:31 PM
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Originally Posted by BC847
Thoroughly pressure-wash the leaf-spring packs and let dry well. Then flood them with an aerosol heavy chain or wire-rope lube.
Such makes a surprising improvement. It's still a covered-wagon but, it takes the sharp edges off the bumps.

Good thought and basically free, thanks.
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Old 08-29-2021 | 08:08 PM
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Friday evening I took my wife out for her birthday dinner and we took the dually. After dinner we stopped and picked up 10 40#bags of salt for the softener. Such a huge difference. I'm going to make a false bottom and load it with ballast, Thanks for the good advice guys.
Old 08-29-2021 | 10:50 PM
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One could put some sort of tank and fill it with water for ballast. This way it could be drained and the tank taken out when you needed to haul something real. Me? I just got used to being jarred and having the back snapped occasionally. I got a pair of bucket seats to install once I get to Okiehoma. I'm thinking I could build a spring suspension under each one with a little shock absorber also. Maybe an air bag would work.

Edwin
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