furyus 67
Senior Member
That's bit closer to the language used. Sorry must be my ageFixed
Very nice Imperial btw!!
That's bit closer to the language used. Sorry must be my ageFixed
You're gonna wanna go ahead and get yourself up to speed on stuff like this.That's bit closer to the language used. Sorry must be my age
Very nice Imperial btw!!
...or when a Kia backs into it in a parking lot, misses the bumper and destroys the whole front end.it's not going to be permanent so he put it back once he gets a little older...
mean destroys the whole kia? don't think a pop cans gonna really hurt these imperials
Agreed! Unfortunately you happened to step into a long standing tennis match of "lower it" and "LEAVE IT STOCK". As Matt stated earlier most of our patrons on this sight would rather see them restored to factory prestige! Others on here such as myself see a stock vehicle much the same way an artist sees a blank canvas. Although I am far from an artist, I'm not afraid to grab a brush!!mean destroys the whole kia? don't think a pop cans gonna really hurt these imperials
unsolicited comment -
just realize that when you loosen/drop the front end, you are un-springing all your spring i.e. the front suspension.
try not to die -
- saylor
They are only unsprung when you install them, the second you tie the upper an lower control arms you add some minimal amount of load on the springs.Mr Mopar !
Ill respectfully accept that, and now I want to really really know the really answer. lets we will try to find out.
is it really unspringing the front end? why do we twist the torsion bar in the first place? could it be sprung enough to provide suspension spring by just being in place? can they be set overly tight in order to make the front end more rigid? etc.
good stuff maynard.
Alan, this one of the rare times here I have to disagree.I'm not so sure that is true, you are changing the relative position of the control arm to the torsion bar, this would be no different than moving the upper spring pocket up on a coil suspension. Changing the adjuster bolt doesn't increase or decrease the load on the torsion bar.
Will it change the dynamics of the handling, absolutely. I know someone who built dropped spindles for his a-body Barracuda and even modified the lower control arm to move the ball joint up 2".
Alan
Not being a mechanical engineer I do not see how changing the relative position of the wheel will change the spring dynamics, having the wheel already 2" into its travel will. Changing to a heavier bar and running the bolt to the same setting will cause the car to sit higher but the ride height will not change the bar position (amount of static twist) that is purely a factor of static weight. That is assuming the same bar just a different ride height, now switch to a heavier bar and you will see less twist just from the static load, so you will need to run the adjuster in less.Alan, this one of the rare times here I have to disagree.
I won't try to research the mountain of data on torsion bar out there and then attempt to boil it down to a few lines here.
Basically, a car's ride height is a function of applied load vs. spring resistance.
That's why when you go to a larger diam. bar, the ride ht. increases.
I'm gonna weigh in... that is sweet...mean destroys the whole kia? don't think a pop cans gonna really hurt these imperials
I think when you find out that whole front end is welded together (and therefore hard to align) and that the grille is chromed pot metal; you'll wish you had the protection offered by the big steel bumper that just slid under the pop can and did nothing.
I am in agreement with you Carmine, but I have given this some thought with my cars (bumper height, not lowering)... with the number of high bumper SUVs and crossovers on the road, I think it will be pure dumb luck to have the stock bumper line up correctly in an accident with a modern vehicle. But if it does, I fully expect to give better than I get in said collision. Now lets hope that NEVER happens to any of our C Bodies.
You guys are talking about 2 different things Alan is saying that it's like having 2 different coil springs of the same pounds/inch but one is wound 2" taller, the ride high will be higher. Stan is using 2 different rate springs each wound to the same heights.
Isn't that what I said when talking about Alan's senerio. Stan is the one who changed the rate with thicker bar which you could back off and still have same ride height and back off more to lower and the higher rate would keep you from bottoming against lower stops.No, spring rate on the bar doesn't change simply because the adjuster is in a different spot. You'll simply not end at the same rate of twist and thus resistance before you hit the stops. If the stops were moved higher in the travel eventually you'd get to the exact same amount of twist on compression.
If the adjuster was set to 9 o'clock at factory and travel goes to 10:30. Then the adjuster was changed so that it is now 10 o'clock the rate is the same it's just the travel now goes to 11:30 but you'd hit the stops at 10:30 before you get to same rate of twist as the factory setting. Move the stops to 11:30 and you're back to same rate of twist and travel just with screwed up alignment.
Isn't that what I said when talking about Alan's senerio. Stan is the one who changed the rate with thicker bar which you could back off and still have same ride height and back off more to lower and the higher rate would keep you from bottoming against lower stops.
Are you just testing my reading comprehension?
Did I pass?