I either neglected to, or couldn't be bothered to (plead the 5th on both accounts) to air down last weekend when we went out for a little picnic adventure run.
I dropped my front end down of a very low rock ledge on the pretty mild trail and it slammed pretty hard into the trail. I knew pretty much right away something was amiss.
I managed to snap both sway bar end links clean in half. At least I made the wise decision to always pack tools, so a quick trail side removal of the sway bar (you can't really disconnect an Xterra sway bar and leave it in place as it contacts the tires and won't rotate up and out of the way) and we were back on the go again.
I left the the sway bar off for a week, just to see how the X handled, and decided pretty quickly that it will be going back on for day to day on road use.
I've surely learned my lesson, and will never neglect to air down when hitting the trails again, even the seemingly mild ones.
I dropped my front end down of a very low rock ledge on the pretty mild trail and it slammed pretty hard into the trail. I knew pretty much right away something was amiss.
I managed to snap both sway bar end links clean in half. At least I made the wise decision to always pack tools, so a quick trail side removal of the sway bar (you can't really disconnect an Xterra sway bar and leave it in place as it contacts the tires and won't rotate up and out of the way) and we were back on the go again.
I left the the sway bar off for a week, just to see how the X handled, and decided pretty quickly that it will be going back on for day to day on road use.
I've surely learned my lesson, and will never neglect to air down when hitting the trails again, even the seemingly mild ones.