So the Traveler and Terra are planning to offer optional air springs with active damping and a solid rear axle, and I wanted to open a more grounded discussion around when air suspension actually makes sense for a vehicle like this - and when it may not.
I'm not anti-air suspension. I am, however, someone who intends to own one of these long term, use it off-road for real, and tow with the Terra Harvester setup.
Here's what I'm thinking and I'd genuinely love input from others - especially anyone with long-term ownership experience on modern air systems.
Why air suspension could make sense for Scout
There are legitimate advantages that are hard to ignore:
The concerns
Where I hesitate is long-term durability and failure modes - especially outside warranty.
Across Ram, Jeep, GM, Rivian, etc., the patterns seem consistent:
These are the things I'd personally want clarity on before choosing air vs. steel:
If Scout can execute a simple, overbuilt, serviceable air system - great. I'm listening.
But if the air option adds complexity without a clear durability advantage, I'd personally lean toward a well-tuned steel suspension with quality dampers, especially for a vehicle I expect to keep over a decade.
The fact that Scout is pairing this with a solid rear axle tells me durability is already a priority. I'm curious how far that philosophy extends into the suspension choices.
I'm posting this in good faith - not to criticize, but because I think this is one of those decisions that will define how these vehicles are perceived five or ten years from now.
Would love to hear:
I'm not anti-air suspension. I am, however, someone who intends to own one of these long term, use it off-road for real, and tow with the Terra Harvester setup.
Here's what I'm thinking and I'd genuinely love input from others - especially anyone with long-term ownership experience on modern air systems.
Why air suspension could make sense for Scout
There are legitimate advantages that are hard to ignore:
- Load leveling for towing or heavy cargo without rear squat
- Variable ride height
- Potentially excellent ride quality when tuned well
- Packaging flexibility with a solid rear axle
The concerns
Where I hesitate is long-term durability and failure modes - especially outside warranty.
Across Ram, Jeep, GM, Rivian, etc., the patterns seem consistent:
- Small leaks = compressor overwork = cascading failures
- Moisture intrusion and cold-weather issues
- Valve blocks, height sensors, and software calibration becoming the weak links
- When something does go wrong, repairs aren't trivial - or cheap
These are the things I'd personally want clarity on before choosing air vs. steel:
- Is air suspension truly optional across the range, or will certain trims/packages require it?
- If equipped with air:
- Can the system fully isolate corners (no cross-flow) for stability off-road?
- Is there a manual or mechanical fail-safe if the system faults?
- Can the vehicle remain driveable at a fixed height if air control fails?
- Cold-weather strategy:
- Desiccant/dryer serviceability?
- Compressor placement and protection?
- Long-term service philosophy:
- Are air springs modular and individually replaceable?
- Will replacement parts be reasonably accessible outside a dealer network?
- Non-air alternative:
- Will there be a coil-spring or steel-spring configuration tuned specifically for off-road durability and towing?
- If so, is that configuration receiving the same level of ride damping development as the air option?
If Scout can execute a simple, overbuilt, serviceable air system - great. I'm listening.
But if the air option adds complexity without a clear durability advantage, I'd personally lean toward a well-tuned steel suspension with quality dampers, especially for a vehicle I expect to keep over a decade.
The fact that Scout is pairing this with a solid rear axle tells me durability is already a priority. I'm curious how far that philosophy extends into the suspension choices.
I'm posting this in good faith - not to criticize, but because I think this is one of those decisions that will define how these vehicles are perceived five or ten years from now.
Would love to hear:
- Scout team input (as much as you can share)
- Owners with long-term air suspension experience (good or bad)
- Anyone else thinking through the Traveler/Terra decision with similar priorities