Scott:
The bag lifters are a kit of plates and hardware. You remove the bags,
install the plates at the bag anchoring/mounting locations on each of
the suspension arms (i.e. two plates per bag) and then re-install the
bags, however the bags mount at the upper hole of the plates.
The principal is that the plates holding the repositioned bags, allow
the bags to be positioned about two inches higher in elevation than
original, provides a longer lever. Thus, less air pressure is required
to elevate the coach to any given height. Additionally, it's claimed
that a softer ride is achieved due to the lower bag air pressure.
I installed both the four-air bag and six-wheel disk brakes on our coach
in March 1995 at the GMCMI Myrtle Beach Rally and am very happy with
them. While installing them, there was no end of spectators watching
the installation throughout the day and two GMC'er friends even helped
with the wrenching.
The air bags definitely dampen the side-to-side and fore-to-aft movement
of the coach while under motion. At the time, they eliminated about 60%
of the wiggle one experiences when traversing rutted asphalt pavement.
Bridgestone R-265 tires took care of the remainder of the wiggle.
My wife was the instigator behind upgrading the brakes once she learned
that brake fade was not a factor in mountainous driving with them
installed.
Paul Bartz
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Scott Woodworth [SMTP:myvair]
> Sent: Thursday, March 05, 1998 8:44 PM
> To: gmcmotorhome
> Subject: Re: GMC: Air Bag Lifters
>
> Could someone tell me what air bag lifters are? I don't get GMCMM.
> Does anyone have experience with other suspension mods such as the 4
> air bag system or 6 wheel disk brakes?