Bilstein 4600 series vs 5100 series

Nissan Navara Forum

Help Support Nissan Navara Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

gazza414

Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2011
Messages
858
Reaction score
10
Location
NSW
Although they are different brands and may appear to be very different from each other they actually share many of the same components and ride characteristics.

The main difference between the Bilstein Heavy Duty vs Bilstein 5100s is that the Heavy Duty or 4600 series is designed for stock height trucks and the 5100 Series is built for lifted trucks. The other major difference between the Heavy Duty and 5100 is that the Bilstein 5100 Series shocks have a zinc coating with a brushed metal shock body and a black boot while the Heavy Duty uses a painted yellow body with a blue dust boot.

The Similarities: The 5100 series and the Heavy Duty shocks use the same technology internally. Both use the same internal valving and at stock height will ride the same (shocks for lifted trucks may use different valving settings in order to accommodate the extra weight of larger tires). Both shocks are pressurized with 360 psi of nitrogen to prevent shock fade and foaming of the shock oil. The outer construction of both shocks is identical as well with an extruded metal body rather for maximum strength and top of the line seals. The 5100 series and Heavy Duty 4600 series are both covered under Bilstein�s limited lifetime warranty that protects against any manufacturer defects for the life of the shock.

For stock height trucks, the Bilstein Heavy Duty yellow and blue shocks are the most popular choice, because they typically cost a few dollars less than the 5100 shocks and provide excellent performance for towing, light offroading or normal driving. Many customers do prefer the 5100 Series even on stock trucks because the shortest 5100s are typically built for 0 to 2 inches of suspension lift, meaning they can run the 5100 on their stock height truck but leave the option open for a lift later on down the road.

For leveled trucks, where the owner has either purchased an aftermarket leveling kit or turned their truck�s torsion keys up, Bilstein has shocks designed specifically for a 1-3 inch leveling kit. On some trucks with coilover type front shocks, a Bilstein 5100 Leveling Shock is available that is capable of lifting the front of the vehicle up. We recommend using the 5100 rear shocks along with your front 5100s on leveled trucks because the rear 5100 shocks are usally an inch longer than stock to accommodate a small lift. In our experience, once someone gets a taste of lifting their truck, they always go back for more. If you already have the 5100 shocks on the rear, you always have that option without needing to buy new shocks when you decide to add the lift.

For lifted trucks, the Bilstein 5100 series is the only choice. With a few exceptions, all Heavy Duty shocks are designed only for use on stock height trucks. Bilstein 5100 shocks are designed for every size of lift for popular trucks, so whether your truck is a modified daily driver or an all-out offroad monster, there is a Bilstein 5100 shock to fit it.

http://www.shockwarehouse.com/news/images/bilstein-5100-vs-bilstein-heavy-duty.cfm
 
Bump an old thread.

Who's running what bilstien and with what results? 4600 and 5100. I'll need to upgrade my shocks within next few months. I have been looking at ARB Nitro charger Sports but there is not a heap of info on them in regards to hd or comfort etc.

Thanks
 
Have the 4600 here. Pretty happy with them both on and off road. Where they really shine is is 100 kph on the sealed back roads or should I say goat tracks, these things just really tame it. No fade, truck is riding just as well after a couple hours running on a hot day as what it did when it first took off.

The great thing about a mono tube shock is that it can dissipate the heat so well/ fast. The down side is being single skin they can be susceptible to damage. Particularly on the rear, although you can get guards for them.
 
Rusty , I bought the 5100's and happy with them. ( particularly on the road --they are a hard shock )..I have written a few posts about them
 
thanks guys.

ive be tossing up between the bilstein, koni(if i can get some long enough) or the ome nitrocharger sports.

gazza you got link?

thanks
 
I have the 4600's I was under the impression that the 5100 were a height adjustable shock suited more the the D40 than a D22, cant remember where I read this but I went for the 4600's as that what's zordo recommends for the D22. The bilsteins are great corrugated roads, on my old stock shocks it felt like the ute would vibrate apart, now with the bilsteins it's nice and smooth.

But if you are looking for longer length shocks then the 5100 may be better as they have longer lengths available, have heard of people using like hilux shocks for longer lengths also.
 
Gaz to the post you wrote on billies.

Only issue I'm having with the b6(4600) bilstien is that they are to short even if I ask for the long travel version. Where as shocks from arb are long enough if I get them off a Mitsubishi triton as they have the same bush size.
 
Nah sorry mate. Got them from 4x4parts.com

I can vouch for these guys also on the 3inch bilstiens as mine come from 4x4 parts also. Cont help with the lengths either sorry shocks where only $66 each when I got mine imported. fast delivery and easy to deal with my brother has the old man emu very nice shock also but couldn't go past the bilstiens for that price but
 
I have purchased the 3" front shocks from those guys and were very responsive on there emails. If I end up with the Billies I'll prob import the diff drop kit at the same time
 
So I'm settling with the billies. For the $67 each plus postage is hard to go past. waiting on an email back from 4x4parts to check lengths.

I pulled off a Rancho today and measured the droop in the shock bolts and got a 540mm extended length which is 80mm shorter then the current Rs9000xl I have installed. Which is probably why the bushes have gone oblong due to shocks being under so much stress when fully compressed.

This will allow me to get the diff drop kit aswell which will save a few $$ in the long run
 
Someone told me that the Bilsteins you get from the States aren't as good as the ones you buy here. Something about different valves/damping or some crap. Read about that on a few performance car forums also.

Any truth to that or is that just someone trying to justify the price gouge in Australia?
 
Plenty of people buy from the US on here and have said they are good. Hard to know without comparing the two one after the other though on the same car.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top