I was just looking to see if you updated not 30 mins ago. I'm very interested in the 5160s. Seems like a good review to me as I'm not gonna pull near that weight but the adjustabilty is nice.
Just to be clear, the 5160s are not manually adjustable. You have to disassemble them to change the valving.
Actually, its a lot better.
Up front, I think its pretty much dialed in with the 5160s. I'm not sure if I'll put the front on air now or not, its that good. I'll re-evaluate it after the rear axle is on air.
In the back, things are pretty good with the trailer behind. Its still a bit jolting if you hit a big dip (I call them whoops) in the road. But much better than stock and pretty much perfect other than that. With the stock shocks you felt every bump you heard. Now you hear bumps but don't feel a lot of them.
Empty, the harsh "bang" is gone from the rear axle when going over sharp jolts. Its much more plush. But on certain highway bumps at speed there is some chatter after the bump, like the axle is hopping. That shakes the cab a bit. Empty, I suspect the rear shocks could use a bit more rebound damping, which might help with the trailer going through whoops as well.
FWIW, the 5160s are a lot better than the 5100s when empty. I'm not sure about when towing.
The air suspension on my '99 with the 5100s is about the same as my 08 with 5160s when empty. I blame that on the 5100s, which are too harsh, especially near the end of their stroke. Here the reservoir really seems to help the 5160s, which never seem harsh.
The air suspension on my '99 with the 5100s is super plush when towing, even with the whoops. I credit this to the air bags, which seem to soak everything up, big or small and the 5100s do a good job of controlling the motion. I suspect the 5100s and 5160s would be about the same when towing.
I need to look up the damping rates on both my 5100s and 5160s and see how they compare.
At this point I would buy 5160s over 5100s, no contest.
Should be a caddie when you get the air ride done. Would definanlty be interested in the rear bag setup.
I'm still trying to figure out the torque control aspect of putting the rear axle on air.
My latest thinking is to use the leaf springs to hold the axle side to side and have an upper torque arm attached from the top of the diff to the frame crossmember and have 2 lower torque arms attached under the axle tubes to the bottom of the frame. All torque arms would have bushings in both ends.
The only problem I see with doing that is getting the arc of the torque arms to match the arc the axle wants to travel with the leaf spring. I'm wondering if it would work to put a shackle at both ends of the leaf spring to allow fore aft movement so the axle can easily follow the arc of the torque arms.