I just got started in this crawler game too and it's a lot to learn.
I love the fact I can experiment with 1 end of the truck and always go back to original by copying the other end, if I need to.
I got a badly-tinkered-with Cliff Climber but I just looked online and copied what I saw. The angles surely aren't the same, but they're close enough.
I experimented a few days and now it's coming along nicely..
Shocks? They tend to lean in a bit seen from the front. More vertical will mean more side to side sway. More lean, stiffer side to side.
Also this will mean slight ride height changes.
From what I've seen looking around online is that most stock setups are around 45 degrees when viewed from the side.
Moving them more vertical will raise your ride height by pushing down harder. This also stiffens the over all ride.
Moving the shocks to more horizontal will lower the rig because of less down force from the shocks(more sag). Any given corner will raise or fall easier over obstacles.
A crawler NEEDS to crawl over stuff. It has to have good suspension flex without twisting the castor angle. If I was you I'd start with the links. Good, smooth suspension travel, will far outweigh shocks in overall performance IMO.
As for what you rig needs that's gunna depend on what your driving over.
Start in the middle and make a slight change to some thing on 1 end only. Play with it and work the suspension and see the difference if any. If it's better, move the thing a little farther, or change the other end too.
If it's worse, try something else...
What's good for mud may be bad for rocks, maybe a whole new setup to figure out damnit, but I'm gunna have fun finding out...
Yes that i know.
What i don't understand is what this turtle speed moving objects need the shock setup for?