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Home > Maintenance & Modifications > Suspension Lift Spacers |
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Raymond Creemers Member Since: 23 Sep 2018 Location: Amsterdam Posts: 16 |
Thanks Steven. How large of a wheel spacers are you thinking about? I am about to add 5mm spacers - before lift - to try things out. It seems that there's a 1 cm space left until the wheel stands outside the fenders. On this forum I read somewhere that if you go outside the fenders, you end up having a very dirty car every day (and I have a white one!). After the lift I would go to 245/70/R17 as often advised on this forum. With that additional 1/2 cm on both sides I would be at the 1cm. Having said that, the Muddy Muds folks have mounted 3 or 4 cm spacers looking at their FL2 pictures. But then the wheels are standing way outside the fenders. But may be that is good for the handling? |
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15th Oct 2018 6:06 pm |
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Raymond Creemers Member Since: 23 Sep 2018 Location: Amsterdam Posts: 16 |
While we are at the topic of 'lifting': has anybody in this threat ever tried 245/75/R17 tyres? I guess this would only work after lifting the car. But it would add 3.1 cm in hight to the car. This would actually mean that you can lift the car less in order to achieve the total height gain you're after. I would never dare to do this as the size is so far off what's 'allowed' by LR. So would love to hear any experiences if they are there. |
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15th Oct 2018 7:36 pm |
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Raymond Creemers Member Since: 23 Sep 2018 Location: Amsterdam Posts: 16 |
. . . or for that matter: 255/70/R17 - giving a 3.85 cm lift -. |
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15th Oct 2018 9:48 pm |
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Raymond Creemers Member Since: 23 Sep 2018 Location: Amsterdam Posts: 16 |
Thanks Lightwater. So If I calculate right your ride is 2.6 cm higher than normal. Comparable to 245/75/R17 which equals to 3,1 cm increase in height. Indeed 1.8 cm less then 255/70/R17 (which is rather extreme, that's why I asked).
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15th Oct 2018 11:16 pm |
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Raymond Creemers Member Since: 23 Sep 2018 Location: Amsterdam Posts: 16 |
p.s. I have 17" rims for of-road and 18" rims for on-road. So all my tyre searches and calculations have been for 17". So I may be off with m calculation for your 18" rims. Cheers, Raymond. |
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15th Oct 2018 11:21 pm |
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Raymond Creemers Member Since: 23 Sep 2018 Location: Amsterdam Posts: 16 |
p.s. Lightwater, have you lifted your car or is it stock? |
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15th Oct 2018 11:24 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4906 |
I have not lifted the car. Could not be bothered. Prefer to keep the weight down while traveling which we are pretty good at even though it might appear we have a lot with all the equipment.
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15th Oct 2018 11:46 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4906 |
235/60 R18 to 255/60 R18 is 739 mm to 762 mm diameter. So half of that is 11.5 mm increase in height. The main reason I went for a larger tyre is 18 inch rims should not be sold on cars being used in the outback, too little tyre side wall over corrugated roads. I wanted 17 inch but LR would not swap them!
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16th Oct 2018 12:04 am |
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Raymond Creemers Member Since: 23 Sep 2018 Location: Amsterdam Posts: 16 |
A question for all of you please. I have recently lifted my LR FL2 2013. I have done so with spacers from Muddy Mods. 40 mil. front and back. The installation was not trivial. It required extra-long brake hoses and adjusted stabilisers up-front. But it worked. The car's handling on-road is not much affected (I installed 20 mil. wheel spacers to of-set). The car's off-road handling is superior.
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19th Apr 2019 10:21 pm |
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Raymond Creemers Member Since: 23 Sep 2018 Location: Amsterdam Posts: 16 |
Here's my LR FL2 - lifted. |
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19th Apr 2019 10:24 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4906 |
20mm/25mm is the maximum lift to avoid body conflict. Spacers would increase stress as you have more leaverage. Larger tyres add to the problem. If off road I take it you are letting the tyres down to protect the car.
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20th Apr 2019 12:11 am |
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Raymond Creemers Member Since: 23 Sep 2018 Location: Amsterdam Posts: 16 |
Thanks for your response Lightwater.
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20th Apr 2019 5:15 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4906 |
Letting air out for corrugated & rough outback roads will allow the tyre to soak up more of the irregularities. It is far more comfortable for the passengers as well.
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20th Apr 2019 8:57 pm |
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AndrewC Member Since: 03 Aug 2020 Location: Hampshire Posts: 1 |
Hi Raymond, have you resolved the issue with your lift kit? I am new to this site and have recently purchased the 40mm front and 50mm rear lift kit from Muddy Mods for my 09 Freelander 2 GS. The rear kit fitted fine but when I tried to fit the front kit, I found it impossible to get the lower arm ball joint back into the hub carrier. I finally gave up and put it back together without the kit. To me it looks like the only way to fit the kit at the front is to hire the Land Rover 204-619 G Clamp from somewhere but have not had any luck finding one. Any help or information would be greatly appreciated.
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3rd Aug 2020 4:39 pm |
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