skinnyR1
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- Burlington CT
I don't think there is much of a solution here, but wanted to discuss.
I drove my truck several hundred miles a couple weeks ago. At one point of the trip, the road was a concrete highway, with a lot of repair work that ran perpendicular to the travel lanes. Sort of like expansion joint repairs. The spacing was close on these. It was like a ripple, wash board highway. Cars were traveling 70 mph no problem.
The road conditions caused my truck to buck violently, enough so that I had to slow down to a crawl. I was literally bouncing in the seat to the roof, and it felt like the back end and front end was coming off the ground. It was bad enough that I stopped, and checked the truck for flat/low tires or any other indication to the cause of it. I could only travel at 20 or 25 mph on the highway or the oscillation was dangerous. The truck was see-sawing, if you will.
The road eventually leveled out, and the truck was fine again. The problem was associated with the striations in the road. Beyond weight in the bed, would there be any solution to preventing this from happening? The shocks on the front of my truck are ok, but can you put shocks on the rear tandem? I assume not, due to the articulation.
BTW, I run 395's at around 30 psi.
I drove my truck several hundred miles a couple weeks ago. At one point of the trip, the road was a concrete highway, with a lot of repair work that ran perpendicular to the travel lanes. Sort of like expansion joint repairs. The spacing was close on these. It was like a ripple, wash board highway. Cars were traveling 70 mph no problem.
The road conditions caused my truck to buck violently, enough so that I had to slow down to a crawl. I was literally bouncing in the seat to the roof, and it felt like the back end and front end was coming off the ground. It was bad enough that I stopped, and checked the truck for flat/low tires or any other indication to the cause of it. I could only travel at 20 or 25 mph on the highway or the oscillation was dangerous. The truck was see-sawing, if you will.
The road eventually leveled out, and the truck was fine again. The problem was associated with the striations in the road. Beyond weight in the bed, would there be any solution to preventing this from happening? The shocks on the front of my truck are ok, but can you put shocks on the rear tandem? I assume not, due to the articulation.
BTW, I run 395's at around 30 psi.