Thinking about installing a rear anti-sway bar kit on my 1995 2500 4x4 Ram. Any recommendations? I see a couple different brands floating around on the internet and would like to hear if any of you have installed one.
Pluses and minuses, for sure. For high CG loads and heavy campers, a big benefit. If you drive on a pool table there is no downside, but on real roads anytime one wheel encounters a bump or hole, the bar causes the other side to react, making the ride much more harsh. I'd prefer a bar with less rate on the front of my 3500. It binds the front up way too much.
Go Thuren, i drive the active rate sway bar and it's a charm. No more harsh reaction from the front end hitting a pothole.
Add one where it didn't exist, and front needs to be upsized. (That’s not optional).
I added the smallest diameter bar to the rear, and went up the smallest diameter increase on the front.
That both have poly bushings causes them to act faster.
My 2WD (IFS + rack & pinion) was already good handling, now it’s a diesel Corvette compared to the straight axle dinosaurs.
The second addition is a rear Panhard Rod (rear track bar) to finish the elimination of body movement against the suspension.
HENDERSONS LINE-UP carries a kit part #
If you tow anything with large sail area, the difference is night & day.
Coming down a cloverleaf, the trailer now pushes against the whole truck versus the rear leaf bushings (if that image helps). Much more “felt” stability.
New leaf bushings + tie rod ends (and high quality shocks) make a new truck.
Most truck owners try to solve this (but make things worse) by increasing truck tire air pressure. Get the actual axle load from a CAT Scale and set it the proper value.
Steering control is the non-negotiable parameter. Even brakes aren’t as important.
The change does increase felt vibration and some road-roughness. So it’s also time for new seat cushion foam.
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Older thread but I’ll throw my 0.02 in.
On my 05 I added the smaller Hellwig rear bar after getting a heavy tongue weight camper. Even thou the TW is low I would feel it rock the rock on off camber dirt roads thru the WDH. Night and day difference. The truck was much more stable towing on paved and unpaved surfaces.
I then added 2 ATV’s above the bed rails and the anti-sway bar was noticeable and handling was great.
Empty on the interstate it handled like a car, or better.
I do a lot of back woods dirt road driving and never felt like it limited me at all. I don’t 4wheel the truck, it’s too long, low, and heavy but for all the forest service roads I drive on it was always a benefit. If I ever did need more articulation I’d would have just unhooked one end, like I used to do for crawling in Toyota’s.
Fast forward to my ‘18 and it handles the same loads and roads better, much better, without the need for an aftermarket sway bar. I never had a single complaint with the 05, but I sure do love the ‘18.
Same here but not everyone can spring for a $1200 custom spring pack + labor. The swaybars do beat you to death offroad. If I didn't have my camper,I wouldn't have one. I don't tow.I'm not a fan of that additional sway bars, going offroad they are like a shot in the knee.
My opinion is that if the SPRINGS (and shocks) are up to the task then there is no need for a rear sway on a leaf spring vehicle.
@slowmover. I've had good experiences with Henderson parts, and note Jeep and GM both used Panhard rods (track bars) in back on leaf-suspended vehicles. I couldn't access the story link but when the author is a PR consultant for the manufacturer you'd hope the product gets a good review!![]()
Same here but not everyone can spring for a $1200 custom spring pack + labor. The swaybars do beat you to death offroad. If I didn't have my camper,I wouldn't have one. I don't tow.