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- #1
My '09 Ranger rides like a buckboard, and has since the day I bought it. (Serious- my friend just bought an '08 F-350, and I'd say the rides are roughly comparable when unloaded.)
I drive a fair number of miles on dirt roads- and I drive 'em kinda fast. (Fast, that is, if you're used to paved roads. About normal speed for those of us still lucky enough to live where the roads that go places haven't all been covered in asphalt.)
Been figuring to slap a set of Bilsteins in the thing when the OEM shocks wear out... But I'm not sure I'm really sure how to decide when it's time. I'm at about 40k miles now- probably 45k before it's warm enough out that I have any desire to pick up a wrench for non-critical repair work.
I replaced the factory shocks in my '97 Ranger at about 220k miles, when they got so bad that I couldn't brake and steer simultaneously. I paid ~$20/corner for the replacements, and put 50k on 'em.
Money's not quite as tight as it was back in those days, but I'm still the same cheap SOB I've always been.
I drive a fair number of miles on dirt roads- and I drive 'em kinda fast. (Fast, that is, if you're used to paved roads. About normal speed for those of us still lucky enough to live where the roads that go places haven't all been covered in asphalt.)
Been figuring to slap a set of Bilsteins in the thing when the OEM shocks wear out... But I'm not sure I'm really sure how to decide when it's time. I'm at about 40k miles now- probably 45k before it's warm enough out that I have any desire to pick up a wrench for non-critical repair work.
I replaced the factory shocks in my '97 Ranger at about 220k miles, when they got so bad that I couldn't brake and steer simultaneously. I paid ~$20/corner for the replacements, and put 50k on 'em.

Money's not quite as tight as it was back in those days, but I'm still the same cheap SOB I've always been.