I have seen the anti roll bar on the Gen 2 Pajero and now can't recall seeing it on my Colt bakkie although it has one in front. Is the anti roll bar on the rear part of the suspension design on the Gen 2 and has other /later Gens also have this? Will the roll bar not indirectly cause loss of articulation and thus cause the rear wheels to "easier" lift of the ground in uneven terrain due to stiffer suspension setup?

My gen2 pajero did have an anti roll bar at the back.Cobvs wrote:I have seen the anti roll bar on the Gen 2 Pajero and now can't recall seeing it on my Colt bakkie although it has one in front. Is the anti roll bar on the rear part of the suspension design on the Gen 2 and has other /later Gens also have this? Will the roll bar not indirectly cause loss of articulation and thus cause the rear wheels to "easier" lift of the ground in uneven terrain due to stiffer suspension setup?![]()
it does hamper articulation
I don't know about the colt's design.
I have never seen a leaf sprung rear axle (as on your Colt) with an anti-rollbar.
Yip, it does reduce articulation. Stable road holding and good articulation do not go together - choose your weapon. Some offroad challange boffs remove their anti-rollbars for the challange.
One of the very few coilsprung rear axle cars to NOT have an anti-rollbar is the Fortuner. Guess why some experience scary rear end problems on older shocks?
All the Gen2, 2.5, 3 and 4 Pajeros have anti-rollrbars front and rear.
Yip, it does reduce articulation. Stable road holding and good articulation do not go together - choose your weapon. Some offroad challange boffs remove their anti-rollbars for the challange.
One of the very few coilsprung rear axle cars to NOT have an anti-rollbar is the Fortuner. Guess why some experience scary rear end problems on older shocks?
All the Gen2, 2.5, 3 and 4 Pajeros have anti-rollrbars front and rear.
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And some of us are getting quick disconnects manufacturedRoelfleRoux wrote: Some offroad challange boffs remove their anti-rollbars for the challange.
Simon Bloomer
Simon,
That is rather clever.
Would that be front and rear?
Are they in the process of being made or fitted already?
Would that be Gen 2 or Gen 3 as well?
Roelf
That is rather clever.
Would that be front and rear?
Are they in the process of being made or fitted already?
Would that be Gen 2 or Gen 3 as well?
Roelf
1989!!!
I was still in nappies and coil springs hadn't been invented yet
I was still in nappies and coil springs hadn't been invented yet
I can't say too much but there are manufacturing license discussions on the go with the crowd in Europe that invented them. For both front and rearRoelfleRoux wrote:Simon,
That is rather clever.
Would that be front and rear?
Are they in the process of being made or fitted already?
Would that be Gen 2 or Gen 3 as well?
Roelf
They look something like this, and require the sway bar to be cut in half.
Simon Bloomer
It is not uncommon. The Nissan Patrol 60 Series already had such an arrangement back in 1960 and the current Land Cruiser 79 pick-up also has this.RoelfleRoux wrote:I have never seen a leaf sprung rear axle (as on your Colt) with an anti-rollbar.
In my humble opinion, body roll and poor handling are not nearly as closely linked as many people believe in the case of beam axle suspensions. Roll is very uncomfortable and hence is perceived to be dangerous. Handling balance is tuned using anti-roll bars, though and before removing such an item willy nilly, one must make sure that you know what you are doing.RoelfleRoux wrote:Yip, it does reduce articulation. Stable road holding and good articulation do not go together - choose your weapon.
Anti-roll bars definitely hurt flex. There are no two ways about that.
I have an unproven theory about the Tuna's woes. I don't believe it is necessarily related to the fact that it has no anti-roll bar, but rather is the result of poor rear axle location due to the need for soft location bushes in order to have rear axle flex, given the suspension design selected (the vertical load is transferred to the rear coils via the lower trailing arms and not directly via the axle housing).RoelfleRoux wrote:One of the very few coilsprung rear axle cars to NOT have an anti-rollbar is the Fortuner. Guess why some experience scary rear end problems on older shocks?
Gerrit Loubser 
2003 Toyota Land Cruiser 100 VX TD
2003 Mitsubishi Pajero 3.2 DiD LWB A/T Gone & missed
1999 Nissan Patrol 4.5E GRX M/T: Gone & missed
1996 Toyota Land Cruiser 80 VX 4.5 EFI A/T: SOLD

2003 Toyota Land Cruiser 100 VX TD
2003 Mitsubishi Pajero 3.2 DiD LWB A/T Gone & missed
1999 Nissan Patrol 4.5E GRX M/T: Gone & missed
1996 Toyota Land Cruiser 80 VX 4.5 EFI A/T: SOLD
