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RE: frame forces from Shock conversion (was Quality time with

To: <lino.baggio@idxcorporation.ca>
Subject: RE: frame forces from Shock conversion (was Quality time with
From: "Walt Philipson" <wphilipson@bigfoot.com>
Date: Thu, 10 Oct 2002 15:34:11 -0400
Lino

If your brother's bushings (on the car, not him) are original, replace them.
The rear swingarms will move around a lot with worn bushings. I upgraded
mine to urethane and installed uprated springs from The Roadster Factory
(TRF). They also offer upgraded rubber and prothane. They can steer you in
the right direction for springs and bushings for your car if you need them.
http://www.the-roadster-factory.com/
The original rear springs tend to sag and allow the rear to squat badly.
There isn't a lot of travel here to begin with, so this can make a
difference. Have the alignment checked by a good shop after all the bushings
are installed. If the old bushings are worn, the alignment will change a
lot. There is a good tech article on the buckeye triumphs web site about how
to adjust rear camber.
http://www.buckeyetriumphs.org/

have fun!


Walt
74 6

-----Original Message-----
From: linob [mailto:lino.baggio@idxcorporation.ca]
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2002 2:59 PM
To: 'Robert M. Lang'; 'Walt Philipson'
Cc: 'Stephen Hanselman'; '6 - Pack'
Subject: RE: frame forces from Shock conversion (was Quality time with
the Triumph)


Hello list,

I've been a subscriber to the list for - what time is it now?? - about 2
days and have been following this thread with great interest.
My brother has recently purchase a very nice '76 TR6, it's in excellent
original condition and is a joy to drive ...except...it doesn't really
inspire confidence when driven spiritedly on twisty roads; kind of the
inverse of what a sports car of this nature should be. The car actually
rocks fore / aft during aggressive up shifts. The previous owner had
recently spent a small fortune on a Spax rear shock conversion and had
updated the front as well. Being the family wrencher, he's turned to me
for advice on tightening up the handling as I've cut my teeth on Datsuns
(240z and Roadsters)and he would like to get similar crispness in the
handling department. I'm hoping for some guidance as I'm not that
familiar with the aftermarket support for the TR's.
I'm now turning to the expertise of this list for any suggestions on
suspension up grades - stiffer springs, sway bars, shocks, urethane
bushings, even tires. The end result being tighter handling, not a bone
jarring dump truck type ride.

Thanks in advance for your suggestions and I look forward to your
replies


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-6pack@autox.team.net [mailto:owner-6pack@autox.team.net] On
Behalf Of Robert M. Lang
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2002 1:49 PM
To: Walt Philipson
Cc: Stephen Hanselman; 6 - Pack
Subject: RE: frame forces from Shock conversion (was Quality time with
the Triumph)


On Thu, 10 Oct 2002, Walt Philipson wrote:

> question for Bob Lang,
>
> Do you have to use the stock lever shocks in FP? If so, do you do
> anything to them?

I have lever shocks on the FP car. I had APple rebuild them with "heavy
duty" valving. Come to think of it, I have the same setup on the street
car.

:-)

> Walt Philipson
> 74 6

regards,
rml
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