poly air springs
Submitted: Sunday, Oct 03, 2004 at 16:28
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markline
I Have a 1999 prado and I would like to install poly air springs to help with heavy loads when touring outback, can anyone shed some light on the ploy airs for me
thanks
Reply By: Member - AndrewPatrol - Sunday, Oct 03, 2004 at 17:01
Sunday, Oct 03, 2004 at 17:01
Wouldn't go without 'em. Had two sets now in different vehicles. Search this site for more info, there's heaps.
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78673
Reply By: markline - Sunday, Oct 03, 2004 at 17:33
Sunday, Oct 03, 2004 at 17:33
thanks very much Andrew
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Reply By: Phil G - Sunday, Oct 03, 2004 at 21:19
Sunday, Oct 03, 2004 at 21:19
Mark,
I also have used polyairs on the Prado for 4 years. They are not a replacement for inadequate springs, but add a bit of adjustability for when you're loaded up.
Best mod for any Prado is to fit heavy duty springs with a bit of lift all round. Makes a big difference. Factory shocks are OK. I only put extra air into the Polyairs when I'm fully loaded for a bush trip and they help keep the vehicle level. I recently did the
Madigan Line where I needed to carry 240 litres of diesel and 140 litres of
water plus everything else, and the combination of the HD springs, polyairs and factory shocks worked fine.
You'll find lots of Prado info on the other Prado sites:
90series group
90scool_aus group
LCOOL tech section
Cheers
Phil
AnswerID:
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Reply By: GO_OFFROAD - Monday, Oct 04, 2004 at 07:56
Monday, Oct 04, 2004 at 07:56
I think the key with this type of spring assist is to load the car first, so you have an idea of how overloaded you are, before inflating the bags.
They arent a replacement for common sense when loading the car for a trip.
AnswerID:
78730
Reply By: Of Mice & Men - Monday, Oct 04, 2004 at 09:05
Monday, Oct 04, 2004 at 09:05
Hi Markline,
Have you thought about another brand called Firestone Coilrites. Same thing as Polyairs just different color. I recently installed a set into my 80 series. Took about half a day on the weekend with no special tools. Comes complete with full instructions. Was pretty easy.
When we take the camper trailer away, I pump the coilrites up until the car is level, normally about 20-25psi ( thats with about 100kg's on the tow ball plus other gear in back of vehicle ), & the good thing is that when you get to your destination, & the car is empty, you let the air out of your air bags to do your 4wdriving & you have comfartable springs.
When I researched this site before I got
mine I found only good comments for both brands the Coilrites & the Polyairs, but the reason I went for the Coilrites was because you can have them shipped from the states for about half the cost as what they can be purchased here ( even with the added freight ). Plenty of other people on this
forum have done the same thing with no dramas, if your interested the company is Michigan Truck Springs & there website is trucksprings.com
Hope This Helps,
OM&M
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Reply By: markline - Monday, Oct 04, 2004 at 13:51
Monday, Oct 04, 2004 at 13:51
thanks very much om&m i will check it out
cheers
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78772
Reply By: Wizard1 - Monday, Oct 04, 2004 at 14:33
Monday, Oct 04, 2004 at 14:33
Also have a 90 Series. The standard springs were going south after 45000 km. The vehicle was 50mm below standardride with drawers and recovery gear, not even full fuel payload.
When packed up for
camping and boat towing the arse dropped something fierce.
Fitted standard height heavy duty TJM rear springs and polyairs. Just
the springs lifted the rear, let alone inflating the Polyairs
With a caravan attached (with Reese WDH), generator, Waeco fridge, 50 litres of
water, spare tyres on the roof the back hardly dropped.
I rate them.
Wizard
Darwin NT
Prado TD
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78776