There has been quite a few questions on a 3/4" drop on our trucks. I figured I would kinda talk to what I have and the pros and cons.
I have the Roush suspension. Although the intent here is not lowering the vehicle but making it handle better, it does lower the truck by 3/4. Since the questions were about fit I will only talk about that and not the handling characteristics.
The first thing you have to ask yourself is “Do I want to go that low?” 3/4" is not very low by any standards (except for those mudders), even though it may sound like quite a bit. The front bumper is 9” off the ground, that is with my STX valence. This is higher than your average car. Point here is that driving in the snow is no different than if you were in a car.
The first pic shows the truck from the side. Note that I have the factory 17” tire which is 30” in diameter, 275/65/17 (I think). You can see that there is 1 ½ inches from the top of the front tire to the lip molding. If you don’t have lip moldings you can add an inch. This may seem a little low for clearance but it is enough. The second pic shows the tire to well lip molding. I have driven this setup with a load of 1800# of lumber and two adults in the front (twice) and did not have any problems of rubbing or bottoming out. The rear tires have 2 1/2 inches clearance, add one inch if you don’t have moldings.


With a truck this low you don’t need the step bars. Since I have small kids I made sure we had step bars. They really loved the bars. When I lowered the truck I realized that for an adult the bars were a nuisance. I felt that they were in the way, the bars were too low to be useful so I removed them. The new step over height is 18”, which is comfortable. My little kids can still manage to get in the tuck without the bars.
So the pros and cons
Pros –
- The wheel wells look filled in, not that big gap.
- Easier to get in and out of.
- Better cornering (I had to add that in).
- Looks
- More aero dynamic, might get better gas mileage (??)
- Fits in garages better.
Cons –
- Harder to see around other vehicles in traffic.
- Can’t find truck as easy in a parking lot.
- Can’t go plowing through 12” snow banks.
- Suspension travel – important if you go off roading
Next thing to consider is the ride quality. Many people seem to think that if you lower your truck you will get a harsh ride. That depends on several items like springs, pinion angle and most importantly shocks. If you just put on shackles in the rear you change the pinion angle, your truck will want to bounce. If you install springs that are very stiff and don’t change the shocks you will get a bouncy truck. Best thing to do is to question the manufacturer of your kit if they have done any engineering to make the parts match. Many cheaper kits will give you a lower ride and a nice bouncy ride.
I intentionally didn’t get into any brands. That is another discussion and depends greatly on what you want and your budget. And in general, you get what you pay for. If you go out and buy a hanger and shackle kit, don’t expect the ride and handling to improve.
There are more pics of the drop in my gallery
Keywords: ford f150 lowering drop kit shackles shocks pinion angle 2 3 4 roush beltech bell tech ground force ford racing slam belltech air bag frame scraping bump
2007-04-06 at 4:00pm
my recomendation is that if you are lowering a vehicle or truck with alot of miles is good to go ahead and do ball joints, links, tie rods while you have the chance..
and for the lowering kit i also highly recomend getting a complete kit and avoid the cheap way like heating up springs and just using the shackle kit for the rear. the reason i recomend it, is becouse that way you wont coplain as much about rough ride. its best to get the shorter stiffer springs along with the designated shocks. do it right the 1st time and get the full benefits of a lowered truck.
and it wont hurt if you add a better swaybar too...
2007-06-18 at 1:49pm
Getting low
2007-09-13 at 12:11pm
2008-05-04 at 1:22pm
doin it cheep
2008-07-15 at 6:40am
Bumpy
2008-07-27 at 6:43pm