Wahugg wrote:James, Thanks for clearing that up. Somehow in my mind I though BDS and Bilstein's were the same thing. And you make it seem that Bilsteins are inferior to BDS which after some browsing around seems to be the general consensus. But the big problem I see is that if I do put on BDS shocks with only Z71 rear springs, is that they would be bottoming out the BDS shocks all the time. If BDS shocks will indeed work with only Z71 rear springs, then I am more then willing to shell out a little more for a better product, but do you think they will work with out bottoming out all the time?
BDS is the same company that makes lifts. Bilstein is strictly a shock manufacturer.
Bilstein is probably one of the best shock manufacturers. So their shocks are not inferior to BDS.
However, the listed BDS shocks for the TB are made for a 2" lift in the rear (shock length = ~26" eye to eye extended length).
BDS does have two types, hydraulic white bodies and gas charged fox racing shocks.
The hydraulic white bodies are quite cheap and are essentially considered wear items, like bushings. They may wear out faster, but are priced very low. These are why Kyle keeps bringing up the BDS guarantee every chance he can (plus he has some sort of vendetta against them). I believe BDS did price-assist replacements for shocks that wore prematurely. Mine have been pretty good for two years now.
The gas charged fox shocks are probably of near equivalent quality to Bilsteins.
The concern is that a 26" extended-length shock needs to be paired with a lift block, otherwise the springs may get loose enough upon full extension for the spring to pop out of place. Since Z71 springs are the same height as the stock springs, I would not suggest using BDS (or any other 26" shocks) with only springs and no lift block.
If you have ONLY Z71 shocks in the rear, just use the Bilstein HD shocks made for a stock TB.