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Old 11-15-2009, 10:49 PM   #1
james colbert
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trailing arm brackets

Guess that the best way title it. Does anyone make a set of adjustable trailing arm brackets? My truck is on a 67 frame and looking at building a set if I cant buy them. Something to control pinion angle, change bar angle?
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Old 11-16-2009, 12:36 AM   #2
Captainfab
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Re: trailing arm brackets

I don't think anyone makes them.
Board member and Moderator here on the Racing and high performance forum, Super73 made a set for his '63. I know it is posted here somewhere, but I can't seem to find the thread. You might try sending him a PM
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Old 11-16-2009, 04:17 AM   #3
Super73
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Re: trailing arm brackets

Correct, I made them from a piece of 2x4 box steel. Drill the holes and then cut 1 side off. Have fun drilling the rivets It will not help you adjust pinion angle, that you need to do with a shim, but it will allow you to get more squat or antisquat in the chassis.
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------Motor---------------Bottle
60'---1.53---------------1.41
1/8---6.58 @ 105.92----5.87 @ 118.41
1/4---10.38 @ 126.97----9.24 @ 142.49

Last edited by Super73; 11-16-2009 at 04:18 AM.
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Old 11-16-2009, 08:47 AM   #4
james colbert
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Re: trailing arm brackets

Thats what I needed to know, thanks guys
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Old 11-16-2009, 10:21 AM   #5
djracer
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Re: trailing arm brackets

Quote:
Originally Posted by Super73 View Post
Correct, I made them from a piece of 2x4 box steel. Drill the holes and then cut 1 side off. Have fun drilling the rivets It will not help you adjust pinion angle, that you need to do with a shim, but it will allow you to get more squat or antisquat in the chassis.
It seems like it would have to adjust pinion angle a little. I know the arms are long but I would still think you would get a degree or two from top to bottom holes.
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So Far my best Times are:

Motor only:
6.44 1/8 @ 104.13
10.39 1/4 @ 125.83

Nitrous Times:
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9.168 1/4 @ 142.58 with a 250 shot dead out of the hole!
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Old 11-16-2009, 03:36 PM   #6
Super73
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Re: trailing arm brackets

Yes, it does adjust pinion angle, but, there is more of a chassis adjustment than pinion angle. For every 1" of adjustment on the LCA hole, there is about 1.1* of adjustment on the pinion. But that 1" of chassis adjustment (that's what I'm calling it for lack of a better term) you could see 5-10% of squat/anti-squat change depending on where you center of gravity height is.

I would not adjust the height of the front hole to compensate for pinion angle. It will open up another can of worms. They should be set up seperately to obtain an optimaly set combo. Hope that makes sense.
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------Motor---------------Bottle
60'---1.53---------------1.41
1/8---6.58 @ 105.92----5.87 @ 118.41
1/4---10.38 @ 126.97----9.24 @ 142.49

Last edited by Super73; 11-16-2009 at 03:37 PM.
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Old 11-16-2009, 04:52 PM   #7
dave brode
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Re: trailing arm brackets

Will commonly available wedges work between the rear and arms?

Dave
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Old 11-16-2009, 06:46 PM   #8
Super73
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Re: trailing arm brackets

unfortunately not with out slight modifacation. Standard leaf rears have 2 u-bolts holding the rear to the leafs. Ours use a thick single U bolt. I bought standard angle's and then cut some of the center out of the front and back to acomadate the large single U-bolt.

Keep this in mind, if the joints in the front had zero deflection, squat will promote negative pinion angle, and antisquat will promote positive pinion angle. Knowing what the suspension is doing under load allows you to set it up correctly.

IMO (until proven wrong) pinion angle has nothing to do with traction (bite) but rather helps with efficiancy under full load (putting all your power down). The goal is to get pinion angle to a perfect zero degrees under full load for best acceleration. Where your going to see the biggest change on pinion angle is at the starting line. This is why a proper pinion angle shows a better 60'
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------Motor---------------Bottle
60'---1.53---------------1.41
1/8---6.58 @ 105.92----5.87 @ 118.41
1/4---10.38 @ 126.97----9.24 @ 142.49
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