Leaf spring differences for 68 C-bodies and maybe other years. Soft to Firm.

HWYCRZR

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Yesterday I started down the path of gathering some details before I ordered new springs for my ‘68 Polara. I figured I would find three or four different choices that came from the factory. But I discovered that each brand and model of C-bodies had the own P/N. So now I am trying to decipher. What ones are the softest/weakest to which ones are the stiffest and strongest. For now I am going to stick with the Dodge Polara and Monaco which does share a couple of spring sets with the Chrysler Newport. I didn’t recall any Plymouths with the same P/N as Dodge. Am I assuming correctly that the base Dodge and Chrysler got the weakest springs and as the performance and options go up the spring stiffness increases?
Dodge examples:

2dr HT DL, DM, and DH 318 -383 eng uses pn 3004 658

Convertible, 4dr HT DL, DM, DH and 2 dr. ht. D-P (Monaco 500) 318-383 used pn 3004 597
Getting stiffer?

Dodge taxi 318-383 pn 2585 240

Police, 4dr 383 440 eng D pn 2585 399
And
Except Sta wagon. Extreme Duty 318, 383, 440 D pn 2585 399
So can assume 440 only have the “extreme duty” springs?

Then there is “Heavy Duty” are these stiffer than “Extreme Duty”? Which ones were used with the trailering package?

Except Sta Wagon 318, 383, 440 eng pn 2585 240. So the Heavy duty seem to be the same as what was used on the taxi’s

I am not going into station wagons as they have left and right differences and by how many seats they have.
And why is it that the Newport is the only other c-body that shares the base spring of the Polara and Monaco and no Plymouth matches.

Just wanting to understand the thought process of the engineering department.
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I am contemplating new springs to replace my existing modified springs. When I have a full tank of gas and then fill up the trunk for a road trip it seems to squat a bit. With trunk empty, no passengers and full tank of gas, the rocker panels are about perfectly level. Front height is adjusted to spec. As soon as I start loading the trunk, it gets a little lower in the rear. I realize that these aren’t corner huggers, I feel that I have a little more sway than I used to.
I am thinking I would like to go up to the next stiffness level. I believe the next level would be the spring pack used on convertibles, Monaco 500, and 4d ht. Not sure I need to go up to the HD or Extreme duty.
 
I am contemplating new springs to replace my existing modified springs. When I have a full tank of gas and then fill up the trunk for a road trip it seems to squat a bit. With trunk empty, no passengers and full tank of gas, the rocker panels are about perfectly level. Front height is adjusted to spec. As soon as I start loading the trunk, it gets a little lower in the rear. I realize that these aren’t corner huggers, I feel that I have a little more sway than I used to.
I am thinking I would like to go up to the next stiffness level. I believe the next level would be the spring pack used on convertibles, Monaco 500, and 4d ht. Not sure I need to go up to the HD or Extreme duty.
I'll be putting a set from a Monaco 500 in my Polara 500, you can tell the difference between the two springs.
 
How are the springs physically different between the various options? Did they throw in extra leafs? Did they make the leafs longer? Thicker? Wider?
 
How are the springs physically different between the various options? Did they throw in extra leafs? Did they make the leafs longer? Thicker? Wider?
That’s what I am hoping to draw out from the crowd.
I do know my Polara D-L w 383 engine would have had the 3004 658, but the pn on the bottom spring is 2835 354. Mine has 5-1/2 leafs. So at some time the part number was super seceded.

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I am contemplating new springs to replace my existing modified springs.
Modified springs?

If they were rebuilt, IMHO, you can't compare them to the original stock springs. They take a spring leaf and bend them to put the arch back in. The way that they allow for the metal fatigue of 50+ years is to add another leaf. It all looks good until you really understand it's at best a guess at matching the stock spring characteristics. A stock 5 leaf spring is now a 6 leaf, but the tired 5 leaves (or is it leafs?) are still there.

From what I've seen of factory leaf springs, the leaves look like the same thickness and the same width. I've never checked that thickness myself, so I could be wrong. I don't believe that there was any change to material or heat treating to change spring rates. I think change in rate was probably just done in adding half or full leaves.
 
If you look at the FSM specs, as to number of leaves for the std and HD applications on sedans, it's quite specific about what is what.

I believe the police car springs would be the stiffest, followed by others, until you get to the base 2bbl 318s.

I don't suspect that "Extreme Duty" would necessarily be stiffer than the police springs, but could have a higher-grade of metal to sustain more flexing before sagging.

Look at the FSM specs and you might see that the rh assy has an extra 1/2 leaf than the lh assy does. Torque reaction control? Especially on the 383+ cars.

Personally, I always considered Chrysler's rear leaf springs to be "works of art", done to a higher level of execution than similar GM items. Taking them to a spring shop can dilute or erase some of that initial goodness, to me. Making them more generic than specific. BTAIM

ONE thing to note is that the normal leaf springs have the wax-fiber interleaf pads at the end of the leaves. The factory HD items have zinc interleaf items. When the pads wore away, never did hear more "sliding sounds" from the leaves. IF that might matter.

If it were me, I'd just order the factory HD rear springs, at the factory ride height, and not worry about the other things. From Eaton, probably, although Espy can be a good source, too. THEN make sure appropriate HD rear shocks were on the car too.

Just some thoughts and observations,
CBODY67
 
Modified springs?

If they were rebuilt, IMHO, you can't compare them to the original stock springs. They take a spring leaf and bend them to put the arch back in. The way that they allow for the metal fatigue of 50+ years is to add another leaf. It all looks good until you really understand it's at best a guess at matching the stock spring characteristics. A stock 5 leaf spring is now a 6 leaf, but the tired 5 leaves (or is it leafs?) are still there.

From what I've seen of factory leaf springs, the leaves look like the same thickness and the same width. I've never checked that thickness myself, so I could be wrong. I don't believe that there was any change to material or heat treating to change spring rates. I think change in rate was probably just done in adding half or full leaves.
They are factory but I modified them in high school by pulling out the third leaf and putting in two leaves from a late 60’s early 70’s F250 4x4. I had a little too much rake and couldn’t adjust the caster so it was like steering a pig with two sticks. After a couple of months chasing it down the hiway my better sense kicked in. I removed one of the additional leaves and left the leaf in that was in similar length to my original leaf I pulled out. I used an hose clamp to “help” my original spring clamp that I couldn’t re fasten all the way. The replacement spring is a little thicker and a little longer than the original. So 4-/12 out of the 5-1/2 are original. Including the top two with the eyelets and the bottom 2-1/2. Thus the original p/n. It worked quite well for a number of years.
It’s the squared off tapered one.

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For what it's worth, here's what's on my '67 Monaco (with 318):

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Driver's side: 2539746

Didn't look at passenger side, I'm assuming it's the same number.

I'm not sure what counts as a leaf vs just a "plate", but I have 7 distinct leafs or plates. I measure the top leaf to be 35 inches from the rear face of the shock-bracket backwards to the center of the rear shackle mounting bolt. I then measured the distances from shackle bolt forward to where each next leaf starts:

Leaf 2: 5.5 inches
Leaf 3: 10 inches
Leaf 4: 13.75 inches
Leaf 5: 21.5 inches
Leaf 6: 29 inches
Leaf 7: 35 inches

I didn't measure the leaf gaps on the front side of the stack, but I can if requested.

Leaf 7 is at the bottom of the stack, but it doesn't extend in the rearward direction beyond the shock bracket. On the front side of the bracket it does extend, I didn't measure it (maybe 6 inches?) - that's where it has the P/N stamped on it.

I'm really hazy about what was done with the springs when the car was first R&R'd in 1987 but I'm fairly certain they were re-sprung, possible an extra leaf thrown in. My observation of 7 leafs should confirm whether or not there is an extra leaf in there.

I measure .26 or .27 for the leaf thickness, that could easily be wrong and they're all .25 inches. Width is 2.5 inches, or possibly 2 9/16. Distance from the ground up to the center of the rear shackle bolt is 15.25 inches.

After the 1987 R&R the car has never really carried a heavy load, maybe the rear does sit up - perhaps a little too much even after sitting on these springs for the past 37 years but I don't mind, I feel confident that it can take a couple of adults in the back seat without dragging the rear end.

Edit: Hmm, I could be wrong about the PN for my right-side springs being the same P/N as the left:

 
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For what it's worth, here's what's on my '67 Monaco (with 318):

View attachment 691725

Driver's side: 2539746

Didn't look at passenger side, I'm assuming it's the same number.

I'm not sure what counts as a leaf vs just a "plate", but I have 7 distinct leafs or plates. I measure the top leaf to be 35 inches from the rear face of the shock-bracket backwards to the center of the rear shackle mounting bolt. I then measured the distances from shackle bolt forward to where each next leaf starts:

Leaf 2: 5.5 inches
Leaf 3: 10 inches
Leaf 4: 13.75 inches
Leaf 5: 21.5 inches
Leaf 6: 29 inches
Leaf 7: 35 inches

I didn't measure the leaf gaps on the front side of the stack, but I can if requested.

Leaf 7 is at the bottom of the stack, but it doesn't extend in the rearward direction beyond the shock bracket. On the front side of the bracket it does extend, I didn't measure it (maybe 6 inches?) - that's where it has the P/N stamped on it.

I'm really hazy about what was done with the springs when the car was first R&R'd in 1987 but I'm fairly certain they were re-sprung, possible an extra leaf thrown in. My observation of 7 leafs should confirm whether or not there is an extra leaf in there.

I measure .26 or .27 for the leaf thickness, that could easily be wrong and they're all .25 inches. Width is 2.5 inches, or possibly 2 9/16. Distance from the ground up to the center of the rear shackle bolt is 15.25 inches.

After the 1987 R&R the car has never really carried a heavy load, maybe the rear does sit up - perhaps a little too much even after sitting on these springs for the past 37 years but I don't mind, I feel confident that it can take a couple of adults in the back seat without dragging the rear end.

Edit: Hmm, I could be wrong about the PN for my right-side springs being the same P/N as the left:

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Leaf 1 is actually what they call the 1/2 leaf. So you have the 6-1/2 leaves pack.
What make and model car do you have? Is it a convertible or a Monaco 500? Do you know if you have the trailer option?
As @CBODY67 said it is in the service manual, but does not address convertible or the difference for 4dr HT.
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Leaf 1 is actually what they call the 1/2 leaf. So you have the 6-1/2 leaves pack.
What make and model car do you have? Is it a convertible or a Monaco 500? Do you know if you have the trailer option?
As @CBODY67 said it is in the service manual, but does not address convertible or the difference for 4dr HT.

Here's the driver's side:

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It looks like there's 6 leafs, but at the very bottom that leaf doesn't stick out on this (rearward) side.

Here's the passenger side:

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Looks the same, 7 leafs looking at the front, 6 from the rear.

My car is just a plain Windsor-made Monaco, not 500, not convertible. Bought off the show-room floor (not ordered). No towing option that I'm aware of (would it be on the fender tag?). It did have the smallest torsion bars that I've seen in the parts books (.94 inch) that correlates with 318.

When you say "6 1/2 leaf" package, which leaf is the half leaf? The one at the very bottom? With the P/N on it?

So my springs doesn't look like there's an extra leaf thrown in?
 
Yes, the half is the one the small one that sticks out the front with the PN
 
Well, maybe someone can explain this. The number I see 2539746 I can't find in the 1967 Chrysler parts book. What I do see are numbers that start with 2585 and 2808. Where does my number come from?

I see that this question on the 746 and 745 PN's came up in a moparts.org posting in 2008, the only response being that those PN's were not to be found in 65/67/68 parts books.
 
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I saw the same. The numbers on my springs were nowhere to be found in the 68 manual. I know on castings they have a different number than the actual part number. Are heat treated or forged springs the same?
 
I found some interesting reading material on Chrysler Co springs in the 1968 Master Technician Set. 68-12 Extra Duty Options. Doesn't explain the difference why convertible or Monaco 500's got different springs, but discusses how they are designed for better handing. I find it interesting that they say customer may prefer a stiffer ride. Is that corporate code for maybe our springs were a little soft on some models, so there are some options to improve them?
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I dug up some more info for '68 suspension. Here are a couple of tidbits from the 68 dealer order book.

Heavy duty suspension in the trailer - towing package and 440 Magnum got front and rear sway bars. (Edit) did I mis- read or assume rear sway bars? I am not finding anything in the parts manual on rear sway bars.
So I still don't know what the difference in the spring packages are for the Monaco 500 and convertibles with the 318 and 383 engines. From what I am reading they are 5-1/2 leaves and I don't see any evidence that they are thicker / wider, so why the different PN? Is it arching, tempering, or do they slide a couple different lengths in the pack to provide a little more support?

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The May posting about springs by @58Special had a link to this article:


They were replacing the springs in a '69 Newport, here is a photo of the old and new springs:

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They referred to their old springs as 5-leaf. But isin't that really a 4 1/2 leaf pack? Did they really drop a leaf in 1969?

Hey @58Special - can you re-cap your spring situation? You had early 70's springs in a '67 300, and replaced them with a set from a '67 Newport? How did that work out?
 
The basic C-body "cabin" floorpan and rear suspension were basically the same between 1965 and 1973. The differences with the Fuselage cars included: larger body mounting rubbers, and rubber cushions on top and bottom of the leaf springs, in their center mounts. Both related to the "Torsion Quiet Ride" components.

Personally, I would not put much faith in an alleged relationship between the 7-digit number on the lower center leaf to the parts book part number. On the assy line, the workers normally look for color codes or paper tags on parts "in que" rather than looking ON the part for a particular part number.

Have you compared the stamped numbers to the numbers on the build sheets?

In the world of coil springs (I'm suspecting leaf springs are similar), there is a total free length, wire diameter, "checking weight", total weight capacity, coil end configuration. For leaf spring assys, the differences could be "free arc height", number of leaves in the stack, plus the weight carrying items.

What all of this means is that IF you go to the salvage yard shopping for coil springs, a car with the standard suspension can have a spring that is taller and of a smaller wire diameter than a car with the HD suspension equipment, which has a shorter free length and larger wire diameter. Yes, GM put paper tags on all of their coil springs for assy line and later ID purposes, which matched the parts book numbers, either in letter code or numbers.

If done correctly, a stiffer spring with a matched HD shock can provide a better, flatter ride than a soft spring with limp shocks. The softer calibrations having a lower resonant frequency for normal speeds and roads, as the stiffer calibrations would have a higher resonant frequency for higher speeds and similar road surfaces. AND from there, you can stumble off into a canyon-sized rabbit hole of engineering-related orientations and theories.

Enjoy!
CBODY67
 
Personally, I would not put much faith in an alleged relationship between the 7-digit number on the lower center leaf to the parts book part number. On the assy line, the workers normally look for color codes or paper tags on parts "in que" rather than looking ON the part for a particular part number.

Have you compared the stamped numbers to the numbers on the build sheets?



Enjoy!
CBODY67
Correct again. The last 3 digits on my spring match do match my build sheet.

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