oktane17, After many hours of doing research on lifts, on this forum and many others. What I found out was a DayStar lift really is not the route to go.
Here are the main reasons;
Reuses stock springs, compresses front springs and reduces the life of them, harsh ride because of the compressed front springs, because of the preload on the front springs the front shock will also fail much sooner because of lack of travel ability, causes excessive wear on the upper A-arm ball joint causing premature failure, during articulation the mounting point of the upper strut plate is stressed "in-out" and will eventually cause the sheet metal to crack and break in that area, the stock A-arm will make contact with the strut assembly during articulation causing the above to happen even sooner, If you do the install yourself compressing the springs the wrong way can be VERY dangerous (if not deadly), you still have to replace the rear shocks because the stock are not long enough to handle the travel of the lift height.
Now the Pros of a DayStar;
Least expensive way to get a lift look, rear is a fairly easy install.
With that being said...
I have a KA(I know it is a bad word here

), but it uses the same lift as the KK.
I chose to do the JBA 2.5, upper A-arms, and rear shocks,
Being the Prototype for the KA, did cause a few issues at first. But I will say the customer support from Marlin is top-notch! Every issue and concern was addressed.
I have since upgraded to the Adjust-A-Strut front end ,because of what I mentioned before about the upper strut mounting point stress [the Adjust-A-Strut has a pivot at the top(right side of Pic)]

, and I must say the ride is much better then the original front lift I had.
Here was my ride stock,

Here with the 2.5 Adjust-A-Strut. Like Cherrie 274, I also like a slight forward rake.
