Roadtrek Adventuous RS1
Senior Member
RV LIFE Pro
Have you replaced your original equipment Mercedes Benz Sprinter shocks with Koni FSD... or added a sway and track bar for stability?
We decided to do something about the “bottoming”’out of our rear suspension after driving more than 85 miles at 30 mph on a bumpy AZ highway.
The initial options offered not much confidence via forums and reviews along with reasonably high prices. We came across Sumo Springs and had them installed front and rear.
These are one of our best upgrades! It all but eliminated the “bottoming out” and tightened the steering. They are inexpensive and fit exactly. If you’re the least bit
auto mechanic-y, you could likely install these yourself. Detailed instructions were included with both my sets.
We have all learned on here that suspension handling and ride are very, very, subjective, so what others like, or vendors recommend are very hard to evaluate unless you ride or drive in a sample.
Sumo springs are very progressive, so how much stiffer you get will be determined by how far they get compressed in the van. For the handling issues you are talking about, as long as you aren't porpoising, it is likely you would not need them. Stiffening the front will increase understeer, which is probably what you are feeling with rear wagging. Understeer is very common in dualies.
The bottoming out in the rear you feel is possibly (likely?) the springs going onto the overload leafs. If this is the case, you will need to go up higher to make sure they don't contact on big bumps (or all bumps). It would probably take 1-2 inches higher and will stiffen the rear end, which lots of folks have not liked in the Sprinters.
Stiffening the rear and adding a big swaybar should help reduce understeer.
Of course, I don't know if anyone knows how stiff the new shocks will be, as Koni usually makes them pretty highly damping, and not multivalved like Bilsteins are.
I just looked up the FSD shocks and they are variable valving. They do it with two separate oil paths through the shock damping area. The talk about frequency of oscillation which is also the same as small vs large as they want to tighten up the shock on big bumps and loosen them on small fast ones. This is very similar to what Bilstein has done for quite a while, but I think they do it with one very special valve setup. We have Bilstein's and they are smoother on little bumps and tighter on large bumps than the OEM Chevy shocks were. If the Koni's do similar, which they should, you should be happy with them for comfort and damping, I think.
The rear sway bar and track bar will certainly settle things down for you as far as sway and oscillations. We haven't heard of a lot of Sprinter issues with rear axle side to side movement, so the need for a track bar is a bit surprising. Some leaf spring vehicles seem to need them, and some don't, it appears, depending on the rigidity and geometry of the rear spring mountings. The moving of the rear axle sideways can cause rear steer, which is what your front steering corrections have to counter. There really isn't much downside to the trackbar besides cost.
Our PW is an Ascent, not a dually. After the installation of our Sumo Springs we haven’t experienced a single thing you described.
For relatively low cost, we took care of all those issues and more with our Sumo Springs.
As you said though, it is very subjective. Sumos work best for us so far.
I think it might have something to do with the shorter wheelbase.... your setup is on the 144 inch platform...
I think it is also a 3/4 ton so much less gross weight capacity, probably 8500# or so.
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Lots of Travato owners have installed the sumo spring.
(most of them installed the rear one only)