Gixxa wrote:
What is this No sway bar we talk of ?
And if I'm lifting 4 inches wouldn't I have to extend the Brake lines ... What does the bumps top have to do with it
I'm soooo confused lol
Almost all vehicles have sway bars/antisway bars/antiroll bars in the front and the rear. It helps to limit roll of the body during turns, bumps, emergency maneuvers etc. Some people chose to remove them as they limit flex offroad. Problem is on road handling gets worse. In an emergency situation this is bad, but other than that someone who can actually drive would be fine with day to day driving. The safest bet is to get quick disconnects so you can disconnect them offroad, but still have the swaybars for on-road droving.
Now with 4" rear springs you pretty much max out the rear swaybar and its links to the body. To fix this you need to get extended swaybar links(or just remove it in general). Can you have 4" springs without extended links? Yes. But you will get more flex, a tad bit more height, and a better ride and handling with the extended links.
At 3.5-4" you also need to extend brake lines. If you keep stock swaybar links and don't remove the rear swaybar, you should be fine. If you chose to remove it or get extended links then you'll need to extend brake lines otherwise you can over stress them and break them(which is REALLY bad). If they break, then you have no brakes.
Bumpstops limit up travel. The point is to stop oversized tires from rubbing or hitting body parts, from blowing shocks by over compressing them, and stacking the springs(from over compression). General rule of thumb for extending them is 1" for every 1" of lift. Generally we have it figure out that 2-3" will work with 4" springs in back. Once you get into it more and change things up(long travel or more extended shocks, different rear setups, etc) you can change your bumpstops to work for you. So you can add longer shocks to get more droop, but have to add more bumpstops to save the shock from over compression.