
Originally Posted by
geodon
OK!
I plan to pull them apart- easy as they're held together by a u-shaped clamp & a bolt rather than a tang that may need oxy-acetylene heat to bend.
Then wire brush/stripper pad to de-rust.
Then paint? What's the best? Or is it not worth it as friction will rub it off?
I remember the debate raged over whether to lubricate or not. Is dusting with graphite powder between the leaves the go? Didn't some older upmarket British cars actually use grease & leather gaiters??
Then new bushes = job done.
Paint - I would paint the leaves even though it will rub off parts of them - the bits that do not rub will be protected. Use whatever you would use on the chassis.
Unless the car is going to see a lot of use on dusty roads, I would lubricate them when assembling with either graphite grease or MoS2 grease. This will tend to repel water that graphite will not.
Many luxury cars from all countries (in the days when luxury cars used leaf springs) used leather gaiters filled with grease. This is a high maintenance solution, and the leather is very likely to crack in the Australian climate. Once water and mud gets in, they are worse than useless.
An alternative is to interleave with something to reduce friction. Traditionally this was thin sheets of zinc, or occasionally other metals. Today teflon sheets would be used instead, and I have seen them sold in widths to suit springs. Either of these will also tend to be high maintenance as the interleaves will wear fairly rapidly and need replacing. If there are a lot of leaves, the extra thickness may require longer centrebolt and U-bolts.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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