Just picked up the newest issue of JP and was reading through it. There is an article ("Coil Suspension Sundries") that is basically a bunch of tips for upgrading coil suspension systems (i.e. TJ's or JK's (or I guess YJ/CJ's that have been converted would also apply)).
In the article it says you should run swaybars off road with quad-coil suspensions. It says "Don't assume massive flex means massive performance. When you run coil springs, sway bars are your friend. ... We know a lot of enthusiasts like swaybar disconnect systems for jaw-dropping flex, but running no swaybars on a quad-coil suspension is a recipe for instability and a possible rollover."
I've never heard this before. As a matter of fact, I've always heard just the opposite - that disconnecting the front swaybar off-road only helps performance. This article isn't going to keep me from installing my JKS Quicker disconnects, but I'm just wondering if anybody agrees with the article?
In the article it says you should run swaybars off road with quad-coil suspensions. It says "Don't assume massive flex means massive performance. When you run coil springs, sway bars are your friend. ... We know a lot of enthusiasts like swaybar disconnect systems for jaw-dropping flex, but running no swaybars on a quad-coil suspension is a recipe for instability and a possible rollover."
I've never heard this before. As a matter of fact, I've always heard just the opposite - that disconnecting the front swaybar off-road only helps performance. This article isn't going to keep me from installing my JKS Quicker disconnects, but I'm just wondering if anybody agrees with the article?