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#21
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Good luck Lee, keep us updated on your progress. |
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#22
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Thanks Pari,
The shocks are about 2 years old in the back. They are seven months old in the front. all KYB. I had to replace them aftrer I bought the car since I think they were the Circa 80's shocks- leaky Boge-fronts. Leaky Koni's in the rear. I'll get some new rears. I'll check the grommets too. Might try urethane grommets since the rear shocks are kind of new. I'll check back and try to send some pictures. One other thing. Did you jack the car up to where all 4 wheels were off the ground? This help is great. I'll take a road trip to VA sometime. The state has beautiful terrain. DFW has beautiful, flat terrrain. You're welcome anytime. |
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#23
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#24
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I took of one of the spring plates last night. I had a little touble getting the Spring plate end free from the torsion bar. the far end of the torsion bar came out first. You definately have to remove the rocker panel top screws and the access disk on the body to clear the end.
I did scratch some of the paint from my torsion bar gripping it with some vice grips to pry the spring plate away. I was just going to repaint the areas and regrease. I'm also going to vaccum the tube as best as possible and fiure out some way to clean the inner splines. Any strategies? I couldn't free the nuts to dissasemble the spring plate (height ajustment nuts). I'm taking it to a shop with an impact wrench to zip them off. Internal heating method of spring plate works great! Hardly a chore cleaning the rubber bits off. Going to remove the other side tonight if possible. Dissasembly took about 2.5 hrs. Lee78SC |
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#25
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No luck with the Impact wrench. Going to get a long pipe. Maddening!
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#26
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Lee,
For those height adjustment screws, break them loose with a long breaker bar and a hydraulic floor jack while the spring plate is still on the car. Once they brake loose, it’s easy to get the remainder off when off the car.
__________________
Kyriakos E. Stylianos Baglama inspired 1982 SC Targa - (Currently Wallowing for GothingNC) |
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#27
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Lee, from what I recall we put a boxed end wrench on the nut, and used a hammer to break them loose. If the spring plates are off the 911 then put them in a vice, and it will take some hard smacks with the hammer to break it free but it should loosen them. Also if you are dealing with rust, spray them with some PB blaster and then try the hammer method.
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#28
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Thanks!
I did something similar and it worked. I put a 24mm combi spanner on the end of the breaker bar on the one I took off. It took a lot of force. About as much as a cam nut or pulley nut, but it came off. I posted on pictures on Pelican http://forums.pelicanparts.com/showt...hreadid=179561 Dig those rusty spring plate caps. The torsion bars gave me the most trouble separating fron the plates. I'm going to clean them with a bottle brush and brake cleaner on the inside. Then Kendall CV/bearing grease for the splines. I vaccumed out the tube on the first side too. Thanks for the reply. I need to figure out how to get pictures on NOVA. |
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#29
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Lee, did you ever finish lowering your 911? Do you have any photos of how it looks now? Try using imageshack http://www.imageshack.us/ to host your images. After you upload a pic it will give you a
[img]http:blahblah[/img] link that you copy and paste onto your post and the photo will appear. |
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#30
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Yes I did. I used the polybronze bushings. I used the spring plate angle calculator to estimate ride height. I went for eurospec,actually a degree less. It did not come out as low as a friend of mine's. He was set lower than eurospec.
I still have a suspension "bonk" and I'm following a thread on Pelican that solved it with rear wheel bearings. Its a slight sound that happens backing up and then taking off. The guy that seemed to have the same problem replaced everything that was a pivot point on the rear suspension without solving it until the bearing R and R. The bushings we a little more involved than I thought. They are tricky with all of the shim stuff. If it weren't for one of the bearings creeping around ( one of them on the inside!) and making the grease fitting difficult to access, I would have been much more happy with them. I also had to mess with end play washers. If I had not called Chuck about it I would have had about 6mm of slop in and out of the body. I read later that some have JB welded the bushings into the body to guard against creep. I like them but it was not an easy install at all. And at some point I have to take it apart again for the creeping bushing. |
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