I've never experienced an ORI get harder while riding in my buddies Jeep with them. We rode to the beach, 5 hours, and they never faded or anything. Plus he also dailies his and has never experienced them fading either. I'm guessing they will if you don't have them set up right but like I said, his has never done that to him. Not saying it doesn't happen, just saying I don't know of anyone or have hear of that happening
I don't have ori, and never have. I'm just explaining the short comings of the design as you compared them to coilovers.
If your buddies don't heat up, that's great. I'm glad he is getting good use of ori's on the street.
Coilovers have an advantage by the valving being completely separate from the spring force.
You can't ask for opinions and ignore the details.
Here are a few things that are great about coilovers.
You can change preload to increase force all the way to drop without changing ride height. This may require a spring swap.
You can change valving without changing or affecting preload or ride height.
Yes you need a bumpstop. Yes you need a limit strap. I'm in favor of having separate items as each one can be tuned individually for best performance. Ex: tuning springs for preload and ride height, tuning crossover rings for body roll, tuning bumpstops for big bottoms and g-outs, tuning limit straps for big top outs and articulation.
You don't necessarily need a swaybar, as the correct springs and tuning the crossover rings will help tremendously.
A sway bar is another tunable item that can be used as a package to get the total optimum performance you desire.
Also remember a sway bar will make the opposite end suspension work harder. A rear will make the front suspension more active. A front bar will make the rear suspension more active.
My overall point is judging an ori or coilover performance by its use on a street on a daily driver is pretty ridiculous.
Investing in tune able options and not tuning them to optimal performance is just as ridiculous.
As an example:
I could buy a crate motor and use and out of the box carb and it run terrible as it was never tuned for that motor, or that vehicle, or its intended use.
Judging a goldfish by its ability to climb a tree is just as ridiculous.
If it's too in depth to tune your shocks or springs, then pay someone to do that.
If it's too expensive to pay someone to that, then stick to a large company springs and shock package.
To me, an ideal setup would be sway bars front and rear, bump stops front and rear, limit straps front and rear, proper springs front and rear, and tuned shocks, bumpstops, and crossover rings front and rear. But that sounds a lot like what jeep does from the factory :/.
Should I copy and paste this to hardline also?