I have seen a couple of bump steer kits for other cars and wondered if their design would work on a J. My buddy has a 94 mustang cobra lowered, and has a bump steer kit on it.
The kit he bought uses regular 5/8" bolts rather than a tapered tie rod adapter with a him joint and mis-alignment spacers.
Would that work on a j? I mean to bore the tapered hole to 5/8" and put the him joint on the bottom side instead of the top.
The mustang kit uses split lock washes and locking nuts with nylon inserts.
I don't see why it wouldn't, as long as the tolerances on the 5/8" hold were very tight so there wouldnt be chace of any play in the bolt.
I may end up pulling some knuckles from the yard and trying it out. I need a set to make some caliper brackets anyway.
Thoughts?
"Oil Leak ? What oil Leak ? Oh, Thats Just The Sweat From All The HorsePower!!"
theres a few of us with phil lindsay's bump steer kit. Altho they mount from the top like regular tie rods, just with much greater pivot angle. Someone else had a post on something similar where they welded up the knuckle and drilled a revers taper to invert the same type of kit, but it was with an aluminum N body spindle iirc.
There are places out there that sell tapered studs specifically for this. Basically a stud with a longer threaded portion with a large lip on it. Using a bolt is kind of half assed.
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James Cahill wrote:There are places out there that sell tapered studs specifically for this. Basically a stud with a longer threaded portion with a large lip on it. Using a bolt is kind of half assed.
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DSMskyline wrote: The kit he bought uses regular 5/8" bolts rather than a tapered tie rod adapter with a heim joint and mis-alignment spacers.
Im aware of the
adapters from Speedway. I used a set on a buggy I changed over to heim joints from regular ball joints for greater articulation.
I want to go
UNDER the normal mounting point. Running a tapered adapter would require having the hole filled and retapered from the bottom. Not worth it IMHO if a Mustank can get away with a regular bolt.
"Oil Leak ? What oil Leak ? Oh, Thats Just The Sweat From All The HorsePower!!"
Just to show what I was referring to for the mustang,
here is the kit my buddy is running.
"Oil Leak ? What oil Leak ? Oh, Thats Just The Sweat From All The HorsePower!!"
Someone on here tried doing what you are talking about and put the tie rod under instead of ontop and he said it caused more bump steer. I think the on top heim is the best way to go.
I know mcmoney tried it but I believe he went about it differently.
"Oil Leak ? What oil Leak ? Oh, Thats Just The Sweat From All The HorsePower!!"
wel if the mods wouldnt have deleted phils thread we'd have something to look at, ill have to regenerate another thread when i go to install mine. Ill at least try to get some pics of the kit.
Phil has a picture in his profile.
"Oil Leak ? What oil Leak ? Oh, Thats Just The Sweat From All The HorsePower!!"
DSMskyline wrote:James Cahill wrote:There are places out there that sell tapered studs specifically for this. Basically a stud with a longer threaded portion with a large lip on it. Using a bolt is kind of half assed.
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DSMskyline wrote: The kit he bought uses regular 5/8" bolts rather than a tapered tie rod adapter with a heim joint and mis-alignment spacers.
Im aware of the adapters from Speedway. I used a set on a buggy I changed over to heim joints from regular ball joints for greater articulation.
I want to go UNDER the normal mounting point. Running a tapered adapter would require having the hole filled and retapered from the bottom. Not worth it IMHO if a Mustank can get away with a regular bolt.
I've seen tapered adapters that do what you want, and put the attachment under the arm. I'll see if I can dig up a link.