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M1842

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Posts posted by M1842

  1. I finished up my work on the new lower control arm.  I put it back together with new bushings, grease seals, and new rubber bumper.  I should have taken pictures of my setup to get the shaft back in.  I used two bar spreader/clamps to move the ends of the arm apart.  Put a bolt through one of the shaft bolts with about an inch sticking up.  Then placed a large socket on the end to allow the shaft to move down as far as needed.  Used a clamp on the bolt and socket to move shaft enough to clear the other end and get both ends of the shaft into the bushing holes.  After that, it was easy to add the bushings and torque to 100 ft/lbs.  Then add zerk fittings and grease the bushings.

     

    It worked well and in a controlled fashion, too.  Impressed the wife and demonstrated that i need and use my tools.  Sometimes in unorthodox manners!

    • Like 2
  2. Disappearing winning eBay bidders is not just a car problem.  I have had the same issues with musical instruments and vintage military uniforms.  Bidders never respond to my emails and I end up reporting it to eBay.  On the positive side, I usually get a better price the second time around.  I think some people do it just to mess with people.

    • Like 1
  3. On 12/9/2021 at 7:19 PM, avgwarhawk said:

    Replace the bushing now. Save headache, heartache and muscle aches taking it apart after discovering the bushings are toast. 

    I finally got the lower inner arm shaft taken apart.  I had to find my vice and mount it to my work table then had to go buy a 1 1/4" socket. Used my 24" breaker bar and the bushings came out with a little muscle.  Both bushings have a worn spot on the outside threads, it is parallel to the bushings, about 3/16" wide and crosses all the threads almost down to the bottom of the thread.  I am assuming this is wear and not some kind of intentional machining.  The shaft looks good on both ends as do the inner threads on the bushing.

     

    Mark

    • Like 1
  4. On 1/10/2022 at 12:50 PM, 60FlatTop said:

    That Facebook demographic:

     

    your young men will be fritterin'
    Fritterin' away their noontime, suppertime, choretime too
    Get the LS into a place where it oughtn't be, never mind gettin' dandelions pulled
    Or the screen door patched or the beef steak pounded
    Never mind pumpin' any water
    'Til your parents are caught with the cistern empty
    On a Saturday night and that's trouble

    Thanks Professor Hill!

  5. Sadly, I didn't take pictures of cars in the junkyards back in about 1981-82 when I was out looking for parts for a 69 Nova.   I saw a 1969 Corvair convertible, Ford Anglia of unknown date, 1959 Jaguar Mark IX Saloon in yards in Northern VA.  Saw a 1968 Olds Toronado in a yard in Southern Md, front clip was gone but the drive train was intact.  There was a yard in Sykesville, MD that had a section of 30s and 40s cars, most no longer had drive trains and were sitting in the ground up to their axles, the sheet metal was egg shell thin and floors were completely gone.  For a quick moment I thought about trying to buy some complete dashboards but didn't have the cash to do it.

  6. So I have my new control arm now and I am wondering if I should go ahead and replace the lower control arm bushings before I install the unit.  The arm came from a junk yard in Wisconsin and is very clean and but there is noticeable play of the shaft inside the bushings.  When the lower shaft is parallel to the floor I can left the shaft upwards inside the bushings.  I can't move the shaft forward or backward through the bushings.  The shaft will turn through about 120 degrees of rotation and then stops.

     

    Lube it up and install or buy a new shaft and bushings first?

     

    Mark

  7. Not the usual question about low gear in Dynaflow, I know how drive works.  In this case. Shifting into low does nothing.  Reverse causes a little clunk as does drive.  Low has no clunk, and does not move the car regardless of RPM.  It might as well be another neutral.  Wondering if there might be an easy fix without dropping the transmission.   I have been living without low since I bought the car 4 years ago.

     

    Mark

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