Thanks Ill do a search. Depending on the wheelbase, the arms may have not been that long. If it were say 100inch then lengthing the arms by 500mm in the front and say 300-400 in the rear would have the mounts back to back no gap.......
Printable View
Did John ever chase up about acquiring the moulds for the holey bushes from Haultech ?
If not, I've been thinking of asking Fulcrum/Super Pro if it's feasible to machine some of their standard ones with a ball end mill, or just getting some stock and doing it anyway.
They have detailed turning instructions here Machining Polyurethane
I reckon a chippy could make a template and do it with a router :D:o
It's not this car, is it (yes, I know this one's blue) ?
http://www.aulro.com/afvb/attachment...1&d=1328242466
thanks Scouse,
I dont know if that is the truck 350RRC was talking about??? Those arms only look about 150mm or so longer than standard RA's. Stock RA's on a 110 mount aprrox 150mm behind the bulkhead line, those at a guess, look about 300mm behind
Not that one. Was definitely green and in really good nick. Might have had the pseudo military look with shovels and axes strapped on.
I remember the fabbed radius arms were like an I beam section, really neatly done and he looked to be using stock rubber bushes on the chassis ends with the stock mounts, which had been moved really close together as previously described.
cheers, DL
That's exactly what I thought when I saw the one in the mag. I don't recall it having much of a lift.
It was around the time LRA started selling angled rear chassis / trailing arm bushes they had got made out of rubber. Even my POS had angled poly bushes on it when I bought it. (still there and in good nick after at least 200,000 k's)
I couldn't really see why he'd gone to all that trouble, but the workmanship was really good! :)
cheers, DL