Leaf Springs & Suspension Authority Since 1965!

RoadActive Suspension

RoadActive Suspension Subcategories

Welcome to the unique world of RoadActive Suspension (RAS), the ultimate assist for vehicles with rear leaf spring suspension. RAS is the only suspension upgrade that converts basic passive leaf springs into a mechanically active suspension. A system that instantly absorbs and dissipates load force energy resulting in significantly improved vehicle stability, balance, traction and control, with or without a load. RoadActive Suspension adds critical strength to leaf springs but will not compromise ride quality. The patented design eliminates bottoming out, axle wrap and wheel hop, greatly improves road handling by reducing sway and dangerous body roll on cornering, and strengthens the rear leaf springs for towing or hauling maximum loads with maximum safety. Vehicles and fleets that consistently operate under load benefit from improved fuel efficiency, vehicle safety and load carrying capacity as well as reduced driver fatigue and extended tire and suspension component life. RAS is a simple retrofit to most every pickup truck and van with rear leaf springs, with up to a 1 1/2 ton capacity, and once installed no adjustments or maintenance is ever required.

  ras-leaf-spring-with-logo.png 


Traditionally, automotive suspension has been a compromise among three conflicting criteria: road handling, load carrying and passenger comfort. The suspension system must support the vehicle, provide directional control during handling maneuvers, and provide effective insulation for passengers and payload from disturbances. Ride comfort requires a soft suspension, whereas load carrying requires a stiff suspension. However, good handling combined with an acceptable ride requires a setting somewhere between the two. Because of these conflicting demands, the rear leaf spring suspension design fitted to pickup trucks, vans and sport utility vehicles has had to be something of a compromise due to the type of vehicle use. Leaf springs are a passive suspension system that have the ability to store energy via the spring and dissipate it by a damper. Its parameters however, are generally fixed and limited. RoadActive Suspension (RAS) overcomes the limitations of passive suspension by introducing mechanically active suspension to the rear leaf springs thereby conquering the traditional three-way load vs handling vs comfort conflict. Once fitted, RAS has the ability to store, dissipate and introduce energy to the system. Being mechanical its action is immediate, unlike hydraulics or air which take time to react. This immediate action is also variable, working in exact counter proportion to force applied, hence the term active. RoadActive Suspension kits consist of a set of two very powerful, variable rated, coil springs designed to support and assist rear leaf springs with up to a one ton carrying capacity. Once installed, loaded tension from the eye-to-axle mounted coil tension springs hold the leaf springs in their original designed bowed position. When strain from load or vehicle weight shift is applied to the leaf springs, the stabilizers come into action immediately, absorbing the force of the load. Being variable rated, the greater the strain, the more counter-assistance force from the RAS unit. By introducing a powerful ‰Û÷load absorbing‰Û÷ spring steel coil system to rear leaf springs, RAS greatly assists the carrying capability of the vehicle as stipulated by the manufacturers. RAS absorbs the load that would otherwise cause bottoming out and thereby provides the benefits of a more level and thus safer ride.

On cornering, RAS reduces body roll by supporting the springs which are taking the increased load. By not allowing these springs to flatten out, the vehicle corners more level with greater contact of all four tires to the road. Improved traction translates to better control and handling.

When towing a boat, trailer, camper or other heavy equipment, RoadActive Suspension adds strength to the rear leaf springs while absorbing the increased load. The resulting stability and reduced sway are felt immediately.

RoadActive Suspension can be independently adjusted to compensate for an unbalanced load such as that of a handicap lift device.

As there is no movement on the leaf spring eye bracket or axle bracket, no friction takes place. All movement evolves from the articulating roller on the axle bracket which will adjust itself to any alignment of the tension spring, irrespective of the up and down deflection and reflection of the leaf spring. The coil tension spring, having an articulated connection insures that the axle and coil spring are always aligned in the direction of the force being applied. Because of the mechanical action of the tension spring, which is instant from left rear to right rear and vice versa, the stability of the vehicle is greatly improved.

RoadActive Suspension is designed to eliminate shock on the suspension itself, thus extending the life of the leaf springs, shock absorbers, shackles, and even tires.

RoadActive Suspension Resources

Best Chevy Silverado suspension upgrades 7 signs your suspension needs repair How to maintain the suspension in your vehicle fleet When to consider a suspension upgrade
Best Chevy Suburban suspension upgrades Body lift vs suspension lift whats the difference What to look for when assessing your current suspension When to change suspension bushings
Best suspension upgrades for the Ram 1500 Helper springs vs suspension air bags How Roadactive suspensions eliminate shock Full suspension replacement
Suspension upgrades for the Dodge Durango How to upgrade your suspension for a snowplow How do I upgrade my suspension An overview of a trucks suspension
Best suspension upgrades for the Ford F250 Trucks suspension system for winter How to upgrade your suspension for offroading Aftermarket suspension parts for a new truck
Best Ford F150 suspension upgrades The squeak you hear is from your suspension Roadactive suspension Replacement suspension parts for the Toyota Tacoma
Nissan Frontier which kind of suspension is the right one Knowing your suspension limits to avoid overloading How to replace rear suspension bushing and springs Best Toyota Tundra suspension upgrades
Choosing leaf spring suspension Suspension parts that need replaced on your Jeep Best truck suspension upgrades Best Toyota 4Runner suspension upgrades
Top 3 things about your vehicles suspension system The ugly truth about driving on worn suspension parts Helper Springs vs suspension air bags  
When to change suspension bushings Roadactive suspension and your vehicle How add a leaf kits improve suspension performance  

Welcome to the unique world of RoadActive Suspension (RAS), the ultimate assist for vehicles with rear leaf spring suspension. RAS is the only suspension upgrade that converts basic passive leaf springs into a mechanically active suspension. A system that instantly absorbs and dissipates load force energy resulting in significantly improved vehicle stability, balance, traction and control, with or without a load. RoadActive Suspension adds critical strength to leaf springs but will not compromise ride quality. The patented design eliminates bottoming out, axle wrap and wheel hop, greatly improves road handling by reducing sway and dangerous body roll on cornering, and strengthens the rear leaf springs for towing or hauling maximum loads with maximum safety. Vehicles and fleets that consistently operate under load benefit from improved fuel efficiency, vehicle safety and load carrying capacity as well as reduced driver fatigue and extended tire and suspension component life. RAS is a simple retrofit to most every pickup truck and van with rear leaf springs, with up to a 1 1/2 ton capacity, and once installed no adjustments or maintenance is ever required.

  ras-leaf-spring-with-logo.png 


Traditionally, automotive suspension has been a compromise among three conflicting criteria: road handling, load carrying and passenger comfort. The suspension system must support the vehicle, provide directional control during handling maneuvers, and provide effective insulation for passengers and payload from disturbances. Ride comfort requires a soft suspension, whereas load carrying requires a stiff suspension. However, good handling combined with an acceptable ride requires a setting somewhere between the two. Because of these conflicting demands, the rear leaf spring suspension design fitted to pickup trucks, vans and sport utility vehicles has had to be something of a compromise due to the type of vehicle use. Leaf springs are a passive suspension system that have the ability to store energy via the spring and dissipate it by a damper. Its parameters however, are generally fixed and limited. RoadActive Suspension (RAS) overcomes the limitations of passive suspension by introducing mechanically active suspension to the rear leaf springs thereby conquering the traditional three-way load vs handling vs comfort conflict. Once fitted, RAS has the ability to store, dissipate and introduce energy to the system. Being mechanical its action is immediate, unlike hydraulics or air which take time to react. This immediate action is also variable, working in exact counter proportion to force applied, hence the term active. RoadActive Suspension kits consist of a set of two very powerful, variable rated, coil springs designed to support and assist rear leaf springs with up to a one ton carrying capacity. Once installed, loaded tension from the eye-to-axle mounted coil tension springs hold the leaf springs in their original designed bowed position. When strain from load or vehicle weight shift is applied to the leaf springs, the stabilizers come into action immediately, absorbing the force of the load. Being variable rated, the greater the strain, the more counter-assistance force from the RAS unit. By introducing a powerful ‰Û÷load absorbing‰Û÷ spring steel coil system to rear leaf springs, RAS greatly assists the carrying capability of the vehicle as stipulated by the manufacturers. RAS absorbs the load that would otherwise cause bottoming out and thereby provides the benefits of a more level and thus safer ride.

On cornering, RAS reduces body roll by supporting the springs which are taking the increased load. By not allowing these springs to flatten out, the vehicle corners more level with greater contact of all four tires to the road. Improved traction translates to better control and handling.

When towing a boat, trailer, camper or other heavy equipment, RoadActive Suspension adds strength to the rear leaf springs while absorbing the increased load. The resulting stability and reduced sway are felt immediately.

RoadActive Suspension can be independently adjusted to compensate for an unbalanced load such as that of a handicap lift device.

As there is no movement on the leaf spring eye bracket or axle bracket, no friction takes place. All movement evolves from the articulating roller on the axle bracket which will adjust itself to any alignment of the tension spring, irrespective of the up and down deflection and reflection of the leaf spring. The coil tension spring, having an articulated connection insures that the axle and coil spring are always aligned in the direction of the force being applied. Because of the mechanical action of the tension spring, which is instant from left rear to right rear and vice versa, the stability of the vehicle is greatly improved.

RoadActive Suspension is designed to eliminate shock on the suspension itself, thus extending the life of the leaf springs, shock absorbers, shackles, and even tires.

RoadActive Suspension Resources

Best Chevy Silverado suspension upgrades 7 signs your suspension needs repair How to maintain the suspension in your vehicle fleet When to consider a suspension upgrade
Best Chevy Suburban suspension upgrades Body lift vs suspension lift whats the difference What to look for when assessing your current suspension When to change suspension bushings
Best suspension upgrades for the Ram 1500 Helper springs vs suspension air bags How Roadactive suspensions eliminate shock Full suspension replacement
Suspension upgrades for the Dodge Durango How to upgrade your suspension for a snowplow How do I upgrade my suspension An overview of a trucks suspension
Best suspension upgrades for the Ford F250 Trucks suspension system for winter How to upgrade your suspension for offroading Aftermarket suspension parts for a new truck
Best Ford F150 suspension upgrades The squeak you hear is from your suspension Roadactive suspension Replacement suspension parts for the Toyota Tacoma
Nissan Frontier which kind of suspension is the right one Knowing your suspension limits to avoid overloading How to replace rear suspension bushing and springs Best Toyota Tundra suspension upgrades
Choosing leaf spring suspension Suspension parts that need replaced on your Jeep Best truck suspension upgrades Best Toyota 4Runner suspension upgrades
Top 3 things about your vehicles suspension system The ugly truth about driving on worn suspension parts Helper Springs vs suspension air bags  
When to change suspension bushings Roadactive suspension and your vehicle How add a leaf kits improve suspension performance