DirtyBacon04 wrote:Hey dont be sad about not having a g60. Youre not alone there. In fact, I cant think of a single user on here that does have a g60.
dont worry tthough. Im sure youll get along great here.

I'm surprised this didn't get brought up sooner. Everyone gets a free one. This one was mine a little over four years ago on the OS

...Thanks Bill!!
coil spacer help
has anyone used the 1"/1 1/2" coil spacers. i bought them at advance auto parts in hopes that when i put them on, i would be able to fit a bigger tire. pretty much a temporary solution until i can afford to get a real lift. anyway... i got home, jacked the truck up, and found that they wouldn't fit. the coil didn't give enough to even think about squeezing them in there. one of my buddys were able to get them in on his '88 cavalier, so i figured they would work on my tv. am i not going through the necessary steps or will they just not fit?
2004 GMC Envoy SLT "Roadiemobile"
Extreme Offroad Pewter 4.2L I6 4X4
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 26,182
There is no safe substitute for a real lift. Ginsu Engineering rubber spacers have been tried and abandoned by at least one member here. They're mostly laughable.
And coil spacers won't let you fit bigger tires. Look at the way the upper ball joint is close to the edge of the tire. Adding length to the coil strut won't change that relationship. It can't. It's fixed by the hub and design of the steering knuckle.
Only wheel spacers can move the wheels outwards so larger tires can fit. And they're not cheap. Read a bit in the offroad forum for what we've been doing. Real lifts, new wheels, upgraded shocks and suitable tires can cost ya $1000-3500.
Suspension spacers of any kind only give you more ground clearance under the frame for offroading. Larger tires can add to that clearance, but suspension lifts in and of themselves don't allow you to fit larger tires. They're separate projects.

Carry on
3...2...1....FIRE IN THE HOLE!!!