by brian_bp » Wed Dec 03, 2008 4:45 pm
Don may be thinking that the inclined shock position means that it doesn't travel much, but that's not the case here.
In the black-backgrounded technical drawing, you can see that the shock is inclined 45 degrees back from vertical in the static position, but the line from the suspension arm pivot point to the lower shock mount is also about 45 degrees down from horizontal, so the movement of the lower shock mount translates quite directly into shock travel. Since that mounting point is about as far from the pivot as the hub, the shock action has roughly a 1:1 ratio with suspension travel. (In the stock Monroe setup, the ratio is even better - the shock travels more than the hub).
This is the point of the author's comment that "The stroke of the shock is not perfectly tangent to the arc of the dog bone/spindle but should be OK."