Carli Ram 2014-2025 2500 POWER WAGON Extended Rear Track Bar

In stock
SKU: CS-DATB-14-R-PWKIT
Regular price $1,023.00

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– 13.8″ Longer Than the Factory Rear Track Bar
– Ideal Roll Center
– Eliminates Rear “Yaw” (lateral wag of rear end)
– NVH Isolated PTFE FK Bearings Maximize Service Life
– Fitment: 2014+ Ram 2500 4×4
– Fits Carli 3.25″ System
– Power Wagon Includes: CS-DATB-14-R-PWHK

Rams equipped with the 5-link rear suspension offer an unparalleled on and off-road ride quality in both factory, and modified form. Straight off the dealer lot, the small bump compliance and composure of the factory suspension is reminiscent of driving a 1/2-ton. That said, this suspension design comes with it’s share of downfalls. The one we’re addressing with the Carli Extended Rear Track Bar is, as the name would imply, the length of the factory track bar.

The suspension is designed with 4 trailing arms maintaining the rear axle’s vertical, fore, and aft movement while the lateral axle movement is controlled by a track bar. This track bar attaches to the frame on the passenger side and axle on the driver’s side. This opposes the front track bar that’s mounted to the frame on the driver’s side and axle on the passenger’s side. These opposing track bar mounting provisions cause the chassis to twist over the axles as the suspension cycles through it’s travel. When the truck is suspended on a rack, springs removed – it’s easy to see how the axle shift side to side as they travel through the shock stroke. In the real world, the tires are planted on the pavement (or dirt); their traction means the body shifts as the suspension cycles. This body movement (rotation of the vehicle around its vertical axis) is referred to as yaw. The more linear the axle’s path through the travel stroke, the less “yaw” will be encountered.

There are two ways to mitigate the lateral movement of an axle with a track bar. First, lengthen the bar itself. The lateral movement that’s felt, in cab, is the effective shortening of the track bar. The track bar will pivot around it’s fixed mounting hardware. The frame bolt is static; the track bar is at it’s longest when it’s perfectly flat. It’s shortest when at it’s most extreme angle. The effective length and drastic angle change through travel is what’s felt as in-cab yaw. Extending the length of bar itself, spacing the pivots further away from each other, will lessen the effective length AND angle change through the same stroke of travel.