Advertise on DISCO3.CO.UK
Forum · Gallery · Wiki · Shop · Sponsors
DISCO3.CO.UK > Maintenance & Mods (D4)

Cowboy lift? Is it possible?
Post Reply  Down to end
Page 1 of 1
Rbillington
 


Member Since: 25 Sep 2021
Location: Peterborough
Posts: 59

United Kingdom 2012 Discovery 4 3.0 SDV6 HSE Auto Nara BronzeDiscovery 4
Cowboy lift? Is it possible?

Just wondering if anyone has tried to use the suspension calibration to give their disco a lift.

If my logic is right, kits like ez-lift do it in this way, and just adapt the suspension settings on the fly.

The 2” lift kits trick the suspension into sitting a different height.

What’s to stop you setting the calibration to be say 2cm higher than it should be, giving a slight lift to clear bigger tyres?

Or have a missed something a likely to cause an issue?
 Disco 4 2012 HSE, Nara Bronze

Gone but not forgotten
2007 FreeL2 XS, Stornoway Grey 
 
Post #236482120th Mar 2024 12:31 pm
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Reply with quote
grzesiul
 


Member Since: 11 May 2008
Location: UK
Posts: 6369

Poland 2016 Discovery 4 3.0 SDV6 SE Auto Loire BlueDiscovery 4

if you got gap tool you can set you default height with ease

Greg
  
Post #236482220th Mar 2024 12:38 pm
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Reply with quote
Rbillington
 


Member Since: 25 Sep 2021
Location: Peterborough
Posts: 59

United Kingdom 2012 Discovery 4 3.0 SDV6 HSE Auto Nara BronzeDiscovery 4

I’ve got the SDD tool.

I guess I’ve got a job at the weekend. Just need to find the flattest ground I can.
 Disco 4 2012 HSE, Nara Bronze

Gone but not forgotten
2007 FreeL2 XS, Stornoway Grey 
 
Post #236482720th Mar 2024 1:44 pm
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Reply with quote
Worms
 


Member Since: 24 Sep 2023
Location: Highlands
Posts: 378

Scotland 2005 Discovery 3 TDV6 Base 7 Seat Auto Zambezi SilverDiscovery 3

Is there enough lee-way in the settings, though? With one dodgy height sensor on mine, that corner very quickly max-ed out when I was calibrating for normal height, so I would have thought that if you calibrate it 2cm higher all round at normal ride-height, the sensor will go out of range before reaching the off-road setting. It would be interesting to know what happens when you try!
 Previously:
2010 FL2 TD4e GS
‘93 Defender 110 200TDi CSW - still got this, non-runner on SORN.
‘87 Defender 90 4 cyl Petrol
‘83 110 CSW V8 - best ever!
Range Rover 2-door V8 (not sure of year - 4-speed box and vacuum diff switch)
Series III SWB Diesel 
 
Post #236482920th Mar 2024 3:07 pm
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Reply with quote
Rbillington
 


Member Since: 25 Sep 2021
Location: Peterborough
Posts: 59

United Kingdom 2012 Discovery 4 3.0 SDV6 HSE Auto Nara BronzeDiscovery 4

Ahhh, so if at normal travel the sensor has 60deg of motion and goes from 0 for access height to say 40 for off-road, I could be moving this to be starting at 10 and going to 50. So risking being at the limit when in action.

But the lift rods keep this range of motion the same, just tells the computer to put more pressure to achieve 0,20 or 40.

No idea if that makes sense to anyone else, but does to me.

I’ll give it a go and see what the computer says when doing the calibration. Presumably it’s sensible enough to not let me set something that won’t work (but that could be asking a lot of LR engineers)
 Disco 4 2012 HSE, Nara Bronze

Gone but not forgotten
2007 FreeL2 XS, Stornoway Grey 
 
Post #236483120th Mar 2024 3:19 pm
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Reply with quote
Worms
 


Member Since: 24 Sep 2023
Location: Highlands
Posts: 378

Scotland 2005 Discovery 3 TDV6 Base 7 Seat Auto Zambezi SilverDiscovery 3

Yes, my thinking was that the angles on the sensor (and hence sensor output voltages) remain the same, but the longer shaft on the sensor arm changes the suspension travel before reaching that angle. I'm not sure I would expect a linear change to the ride height at each setting,though.

I think you can get variable rods where you can change the rod length to get the lift desired. I'm pretty sure I also saw someone online who had done they're own lift rods by simply cutting the sensor arm(s) and inserting a suitable length of bolt between the two halves.

Having said all this, I would imagine that only a vanishingly small proportion of Discoveries are ever in a situation where the existing range of travel is not sufficient. I would also be very wary of doing anything to change the centre of gravity for normal road use - I've seen too many stock Defenders and D1s rolled by inappropriately weighted roof racks, when a near-side wheel drops off the edge of a tarmac road...
 Previously:
2010 FL2 TD4e GS
‘93 Defender 110 200TDi CSW - still got this, non-runner on SORN.
‘87 Defender 90 4 cyl Petrol
‘83 110 CSW V8 - best ever!
Range Rover 2-door V8 (not sure of year - 4-speed box and vacuum diff switch)
Series III SWB Diesel 
 
Post #236483420th Mar 2024 4:13 pm
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Reply with quote
TheGreenMachine
 


Member Since: 05 Nov 2023
Location: North Lincolnshire
Posts: 63

United Kingdom 2015 Discovery 4 3.0 SDV6 HSE Lux Auto Aintree GreenDiscovery 4

You'd also need to consider the camber, particularly at the back. Mine is hugely positive if in lifted mode with Easy lift. Be interested to see a solution though.
  
Post #237396825th Jul 2024 1:19 pm
View user's profile Send private message View poster's gallery Post Reply
Display posts from the last:  
Post Reply Back to top
Page 1 of 1
Jump to:  
Previous Topic | Next Topic >


Posting Rules
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum



DISCO3.CO.UK Copyright © 2004-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis
DISCO3.CO.UK RSS Feed - All Forums

DISCO3.CO.UK is independent and not affiliated to Land Rover.
Switch to Mobile Site