chart of bars below
make sure you buy your bars off a manufacturer with decent reputation.
the hex end is set at a specific angle that differs for each bar thickness because each thickness twists a different amount under load.
if the offset and thickness are mismatched you can't adjust the suspension properly
the subtleties of this is lost on some manufacturers
hotchkiss, firm feel and mopar get it right
for rear springs i'd be inclined to find a uk manufacturer or reconditioner. they can re arch and re temper the springs in your spring pack and replace or repair any broken ones
what you spend on a custom job here you would be spending on shipping, and you have some come back if they droop in 3 years. you have no rights on anything exported outside of US territory regardless of how crap it is.
http://arengineering.com/tech/torsion-bar-tango/
stuff on spring rate with input from a guy at hotchkiss
http://www.protouringmopar.com/showthre ... ng-weights.
front
upper control arm bushes or new control arms (ask morgan his are great)
lower control arm bushes
plate the lower control arm bases (ask Anton at APD)
use moog bushes in both places
strut rod bushes 3 types get moog improved and follow the instructions in the package not the manual
idler arm replace the rubber with a urethane bush or a ball bearing conversion
front end set up
lots of views....
but standard ride height is best
positive castor (some for manual, as much as possible for power steering)
some toe in so the wheels run straight ahead when loaded up
neutral or a smidge negative camber
fit anti-roll bar
rear
re build springs with new plastic sliders and zinc plate interleaves (make your own)
get them re arched for proper height and re tempered to provide a spring rate that compliments the front. if done right you probably don't need anti roll bar at the back. if you get one get the one that bolts to the body not axle tubes pointless adding the full weight of the bar to the axle.
urethane bush front eyes and shackles
i use KYB gas adjust. they are dirt cheap and a a slight upgrade. i'd suggest if you do all this work you should probably invest in something better
keep in mind that what is good for drag racing is particularly crap for everything else. so establish in the first instance what the retailer of the parts means by "racing" drag or road and track (circuit)
big stiff springs will make it handle like a modern car ONLY if the shocks are matched to the install based on chassis dyno suspension testing.
i didn't have the time or money for that so i made sure i set everything back to standard. ride height spring rate etc and used a slightly stiffer shock wch gets a little bit harder when worked.
its easy to end up with something that handles like a milkfloat on rubber cone suspension if you just go mad on the stiffest springs you can get
mine drives alright
rolls a little but that just gives a better indicator of when it will let go. stops better and i don't loose bits of exhaust on speed bumps
Anton at APD did my rear springs and i rebuilt the front end with a 16:1 manual box. it works quite well
16:1 manual in an A body is ok power steering is 14:1 anyway
i used NOS upper ball joints and japanese Three 555 lowers (4x4 off roaders rate them) and TRW track rod ends (three 555 make stock for MOOG)
try to get ball joints and track rod ends with the proper plastic edged push fit seal as used by mopar not rubber boots with wire clips as used by everyone else.
but keep in mind that ball joints are robust and you probably don't need em. and each pair of upper arms can only manage 2 or 3 ball joint replacements before they are scrap, each install cuts a new thread and any mis alignment stretches the hole in the arm.
although i guess you could press the holes back to size ..... mebee
Dave