b-body-bob
Well-known member
Yes you're right.it really can't be the rear socket.
I've still got everything finger tight so I'll just take it all back apart and mess with it some more.
Yes you're right.it really can't be the rear socket.
I'm just wondering if the LCA isn't cocked to one side. I can't say torquing the stud early would cause that, but I'm sorta at a loss for this misalignment thing. There ain't that much play in the K-member mounting.
Yes, it only works one way. This is one of those instances where I sorta forgot how the arrangement works.BTW there's really only one place the torsion bar lever works, right? It would be a mess if I drove the bar in then couldn't set the ride height. It's between level and pointing downward now.
It could be my nose, it gets out of joint sometimes when I work on these junkers.Something has to be tweaked. I don't know if it's the car, the K-member, the control arm or your nose but something ain't right there.
I'm not sure on this. None of my K-members are concave from lifting. I'm wondering if it didn't hit something and tweak it. If metal moves in one place, it's gotta move in another too. I can absolutely see where upward force on the bottom could change the angle in the stud tubes.It almost has to be the LCA. The bottom of the k-frame is kind of concave from years of lifting the car there but otherwise no damage. As I've said before, there's no obvious damage to the car - out of place welds, wrinkles, evidence of hammering, etc.
We had Agnes supported in approximately the same area, maybe a little further back. If anything, I'd say moving the stands back would make it sag more--your weight is further away from the fulcrum.Stands are still in the same place. Should I move them back toward the torsion bar x-member?
I don't think the car is sagging because it's not and never has been rotted or cut apart. At this point I'll try anything.
Calling it concave might have been a little exaggeration. The top under the engine and all that is smooth. If the bottom moved enough to change the pivot, the top would've had to move too. I'll try to remember to snap a photo so you can see what I'm talking about WRT the bottom of itNone of my K-members are concave from lifting
Before the day's over I'm going to try at least two things - raise the car up by the floor jack off the stands, see if that changes anything. Then while it's up, move the stands back and see if that makes a difference.We had Agnes supported in approximately the same area, maybe a little further back
Well that's damned frustrating.Next I took the knuckle off the LCA so there's no weight hanging off the end of that. Then I loosened the pivot up all the way and was able to get the front of the bar all the way in the socket. but that was because the LCA moved rearward with the pivot loose. I still have about 1/4" hanging out the back, plus the 1/8" or so it takes for the clip.
When I tighten the LCA pivot, and try to shove the bar forward, the bar doesn't move and the LCA socket just pulls off the bar as the pivot tightens up.
I was not aware that you'd been here before with the same car and didn't have problems that go-round. That changes my tune significantly because it kind of eliminates crash damage unless you crashed it and ain't talkin'.I guess the next thing to do is to pull the LCA off and photograph the heck out of everything to see what can be seen. Gotta say though that the torsion bar went in easy when I rebuilt the front end, and it came back out easy when I removed the k-frame. I haven't driven 100 miles in the stupid thing since it went back together, and it's not like I was going all Bo and Luke Duke in it, but I'm out of ideas besides to keep taking things apart.
Let's revisit this for a moment.When I tighten the LCA pivot, and try to shove the bar forward, the bar doesn't move and the LCA socket just pulls off the bar as the pivot tightens up.
Yes, did that last night actually. No problem.straightness
Some people at FABO have suggested that maybe the car/k-frame was tweaked and the k-frame bolts were holding it in place. Unbolting the k-frame released the tweak, then it bolted back in the tweaked place. I don't tweaking believe that for a minute.eliminates crash damage
Not the header, not even close that I can see. I think it's just crooked enough that the hex hits inside the socket. I also think I'm getting really close to just pounding it in and reassembling the car so I can at least start the damned thing to break it in.The bar's contacting something. It has to be. My brain wants to blame the header, but I've grown to hate those things nearly as much as you. Perhaps I'm a bit biased.
Look at the torsion bar socket misalignment in this picture. The back of the socket is facing UP. To me, that says the frame in FRONT of the jack stand is drooping DOWN. Here's what I would try. Get on the frame rail well in front of that jack stand with your floor jack. You'll need a 2x4 or 4x4 to reach it of course and jack up on the front of that frame rail then check the torsion bar socket alignment and see what it looks like.
It's been unbolted and unbushed for a long time. I just checked, the FSM doesn't mention taking the strut off the arm with the arm in place. If I can't take it off separately I'll need to unbolt the header to get it out.I'm pretty certain I already said this, but I'll say it again:
Take the strut rod out. Completely. Get it out of the way entirely.