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Adam/Mill Valley CA 11-15-2025 06:10 PM

Shock rebuilder
 

Who is the current "go-to" guy for lever shock rebuilding? I've seen the name Andy Falandes highly recommended several times, is he still actively doing this? One front shock on my '36 pickup is completely shot and has basically no resistance to motion.

Also, is it the shock/lever arm that actually restrains the front suspension at full droop? I never thought about it before, but I notice the one bad shock's lever arm extends down much further than the other side

Adam

deuce lover 11-15-2025 11:54 PM

Re: Shock rebuilder
 

Yes Andy is still actively doing shocks.


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john greco 11-16-2025 12:28 AM

Re: Shock rebuilder
 

Just finished my 34 front shock , what service , fast turn around and awesome work ! What an asset to the hobby , last time I dealt with apple hydraulics , what a mess that was , sent same shock back 5 times , and it still leaks , never ever again .

corvette8n 11-16-2025 07:32 AM

Re: Shock rebuilder
 

I had Andy do all 4 of my shocks, nice job, quick turnaround, great communication.

Kube 11-16-2025 07:56 AM

Re: Shock rebuilder
 

Andy is my guy as well. Recently did a set for a '36 of mine.
Apple? Stay far away. How that place remains in business is beyond my imagination.

Adam/Mill Valley CA 11-16-2025 09:36 AM

Re: Shock rebuilder
 

Thanks all, I will certainly send the bad shock to Andy Falandes.

Any thoughts on my second question, as to what constrains the front suspension on a '36 (or any similar transverse spring front end) at full droop? If it is, in fact, that shock lever arm/dogbone link, it seems to me that would put a lot of stress on the internals of the shock after years of dropping a wheel into potholes-but I don't see what else limits the movement.

Adam

Kube 11-16-2025 11:49 AM

Re: Shock rebuilder
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Adam/Mill Valley CA (Post 2423226)
Thanks all, I will certainly send the bad shock to Andy Falandes.

Any thoughts on my second question, as to what constrains the front suspension on a '36 (or any similar transverse spring front end) at full droop? If it is, in fact, that shock lever arm/dogbone link, it seems to me that would put a lot of stress on the internals of the shock after years of dropping a wheel into potholes-but I don't see what else limits the movement.

Adam

The spring keeps the suspension within a designed height (+/-) specification. The shock link should NEVER reach its full travel. If it does, something is gonna break. The shock? The link? Something...

Adam/Mill Valley CA 11-16-2025 08:41 PM

Re: Shock rebuilder
 

The spring keeps the suspension within a designed height (+/-) specification.

OK that makes sense. I think my issue is that the passenger side of the spring has lost it's arch, allowing the shock on that side to go beyond its limit-that's the shock that has failed. At this point I'm awaiting a new (stock) spring from Eaton spring, and sending the bad shock to Andy Falandes for a rebuild, if possible-if the shock is beyond repair, then he will try to find a good core for me in his stash.

Adam


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