Gents,
In the past, for the reasons mentioned above, KORE has recommended against "recentering" the axle housing.
Bad things can happen if you use an adjustable track bar to "recenter" and your bump stops no longer land exactly where they should.
Since I wrote about this a couple of years ago, we've discovered four things.
1. Because of their shape and material composition, the OE bump stops don't work well on certain kinds of bumps. During hard off-road use, whenever the axle takes a hit on only one side, the odd angles imposed can cause metal to metal contact of the upper control arm mounting flanges with the aft spring bucket on 3rd Gen. trucks and an ancillary "L" shaped frame bracket on 2nd Gen. trucks. During "normal" use you will never, ever see this problem -- but we don't engineer our products for normal use.
2. The OE bump stops don't work as well as poly bump stops. After compression, rubber stores energy and bounces back. Polyurethane compresses, but doesn't "recoil" like rubber, making for a much smoother bottom out.
3. Due to their design, KORE poly bump stops stay in place better than rubber bump stops. The OE rubber bump stops on 3rd Gen. trucks have a pointed end, ostensibly designed to gradually increase resistance as more material is exposed to pressure from the the axle housing while it bottoms out. In theory this is a good design, and it would probably work as advertised if the axle housing always bottomed out evenly on both sides. The problem is that the Real World isn't a test track in Detroit. The Real World has bumps that occur randomly and do all kind of crazy things to a truck. When the passenger-side bottoms out independently of the driver-side, the housing bottom-out pad hits only one side of the OE "progressive" bump stop and pushes it right out of the cup! Even though we had glued our rubber bump stops in place, this phenomenon caused us to lose the OE passenger-side bump stop while racing in the 2004 Baja 500. Hundreds of miles of clanking and metal to metal thrashing caused me permanent neural damage and inspired the creation of a better bump stop. Since 2nd Gen trucks have short, flat bump stops, this problem doesn't apply to them.
4. Even though it falls within the OE suspension geometry, some owners find a slight driver-side axle shift to be untenable. Because of the ride quality KORE provides, they want to use KORE suspension instead of a lift kit, but they don't want the track change.
These discoveries inspired the creation of KORE's new bump stops that are somewhat longer than stock - about an inch longer than stock 3rd Gen. bump stops and a couple inches longer than stock 2nd Gen. bump stops. KORE includes a pair of new bump stops with all suspension systems.
In order to prevent metal to metal contact, at full compression, they limit upstroke by about an inch on most trucks - some a little more, some a little less. Overall wheel travel remains the same because, over the last two years KORE shocks have changed dimension slightly - to provide more "droop" travel and better high-speed off road performance.
This also enables people to use an adjustable track bar to shift their axle back to the passenger side without any negative consequences. With our new, slightly longer bump stops, a "recentered" axle will bottom out correctly.
We get so many calls about track bars we're now making them. They'll be a nice OE replacement that will provide tighter steering and better control. Expect to see KORE's new adjustable track bars on the market this summer - for both 2nd and 3rd Gen trucks. These will be direct bolt-on units requiring no cutting, drilling or welding. These track bars have replaceable spherical bearings at each end, so like all our products, they're fully rebuildable and guaranteed for life.
Issue two: brake lines. On 3rd Gen. Rams with KORE systems, brake line length is not a factor. 2003 - 2005 Rams will top out on their control arms before they can put any tension on their brake lines. This is also true on most 2nd Gen Rams. However, at full droop there are some 2nd Gen Rams that can still put a bit of tension on brake lines. Not all model years are affected, so you've got to test it to make sure. "Revision 2" of all KORE installation instruction manuals reflect this change. The cure is either to adjust (depending on the design of the braketry) or purchase extended brake lines that will permit more wheel travel.
Cheers,
Kent Kroeker