Looking from the picture above the adjuster is pretty much the same thing I have with Kings
The difference seems to be the Reservoir hose location so I think you guys can do this without taking the CO out of the truck. You’ll run into same issues I ran to (see pics below)
I used this video as the premise for what i needed to do. My Kings came with instructions that also say to take it a shop but for what it's is super easy to do and it's a lot more useful to learn how to do it yourself and believe me you'll play with those adjusters more than once. I've adjusted 4 times already, initialy because the springs settled some over time, then because i keep adding weight, (Rock sliders, then prerunner bumper, now a winch bumper with a 12k winch) Always spray wd40 or similar into the coilover threads before turning the adjusters, will make the job easier...
King instructions say to loosen up that pinch bolt one full turn and nothing more, so whatever you do, don't remove that little sucker off cause you'll screw it all up
, ONE full turn off is all needs.
This is from my built thread in the 4th gen RAM forum
"Decided to give my coilovers one turn as they've settled a little more and was running 39 1/4 to the ground from the 39 3/8 i had originally, not that i'm that picky, but mostly because i wanted to see how tough was the job of adjusting them while on the vehicle
, let me tell you is a little biatch, doable though, but it's not a breeze.
Main issue is the reservoir hose being in the middle asides from the strut tower clearance.
There is no way to turn the fackers on with the tool provided or any other spanner wrench if i had one.
This is the tool provided by King, kind of like a long punch, can't turn past this point on the driver side because the hose is in the middle, and there are not visible holes where to place the tool.
The pinch bolt is visible in this pic. Again, don't loosen that one up in full. just one full turn and that's it.
Untitled by
RAM RSM, on Flickr
Here comes Harbor Freight to the rescue
They have a punch set i bought for $8 i think, picked the 5/16 punch and made a mark where i thought the piece i needed was going to clear the hose, and used my HF grinder to cut it, 1 min job total
Untitled by
RAM RSM, on Flickr
Then wrapped one end in electrical tape and inserted the tip in the hole..
Untitled by
RAM RSM, on Flickr
and then just pounded away until any hole is available for the the King provided tool to fit
, passenger side is another mess on it's own, but the combination of the little 5/16 punch with the longer one does the job well.
Untitled by
RAM RSM, on Flickr
Also, this are the spanner tools i have. the T one i can tell you is the best of them all. King sell that one and it should fit your Fox 2.5's adjusters (confirm it just in case). I bought a set of punch tools from HF and cut one of them short (the 5/16 one) which i use to turn the adjuster where the big T spanner doesn't fit as you see in the pics. You have to pount the tip that is exposed with a hammer, so just be carefull to hit it where you should..
Untitled by
RAM RSM, on Flickr
Hope it helps.