Hey guys, Im thinking about using the piece I cut off when I split the front wishbones, to attach the rear radius rods together and then using that ball and socket joint to attach the the radius to the cross member . Sure would articulate good, but would it hold up ? Running a blown flathead . Thanks for the ideas ..
The concept is good, but the radius rod are not strong enough for this duty. You can beef them up or add a torque arm to take the load. The torque arm would replace the function of the original torque tube.
You apparently are talking open drive conversion? on the daily driven 32 with souped up Olds Rocket/stick trans/Olds rear, I used 35/36 trailing arms tied together at front with a 32 wishbone yoke, and...no torque arm. 35/36 are the best by far, for strength. The car has been beat on fiercely back when first built 3 years back, but it has skinny bias. Slicks & serious racing would justify a torque arm. I would not trust 33/34 rear arms for open drive even with twin torque arms, I had a 34 set and they are just look too wimpy as far as their design.
My brother's A pickup has had this setup with 36 wishbones for over a decade. His is behind a fire breathing 312 that has made numerous passes down the track at Mokan.
Its not even traction that causes rear movement. Our 32 with open drive 35/36 split radius rods and a decent torque arm attached to a truck size tie rod end. The tie rod nut came slightly loose on a long road trip and every time we let off the gas we could hear a little knock. Put the car on a lift and put a rattle gun on the nut , problem gone. What i am saying is just because nothing has broken with no torque arm yet, doesn’t mean it wont.
If you want to be totally sure that the wishbone will stand up to it, you can make them into a ladder bar with a piece of tubing welded to the top of the wishbone and then attached at the other end on top of the rear axle. Look at how my buddy @hotrodderhaag did his on his 32 three window. plenty beefy, worked great and look killer.
You said they are split, and anytime the front ends are not articulating from one precise point like a wishbone ball, then you have stresses that simply don't exist with using a center ball. you proved it when saying a nut loosened up. There is an old thread here where HarmsWay asked for photographic proof of 35/36 arm failures that never used a torque arm. Pages later, no one could. There was one pic showing totally rotted out arms that did fall apart the forged ends, it was paper thin and full of rot holes. Another lame pic showed arms bent sideways on a chassis that was pushed around in a junkyard by a dozer. .
I agree with F&J about a single front pivot point being the best (if not possible than be as absolutly close together as you can to minimize binding). Also the longer the arms the better to minimize pinion angle change (mine are stock length with the torque arms being the only new welding). I am using an open drive 47 truck rear (hope to use a quick change in the future), an open drive 3-sp, 35/36 radius rods, added 1" DOM tube torque arms, homemade brackets, Johnny Joint, and model A or T rear spring. The rear crossmember is Model A on my homemade frame (Dadgum frame). I'm using a coupling nut which will be welded on both sides of my center crossmember with the jamb nut. I still need to complete all the welding but here are some pictures so far. Bob
Your setup looks plenty strong and well designed. I'm sure old Henry would balk, but Edsel would certainly approve.
Considering the gusset is mounted on center of the housing I don’t think much triangulation strength is added in this setup
https://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/attachments/2016-05-05-17-25-08_zpsrhtnqo7o-jpg.4491391/ This is my setup done by Industrial Chassis.
As long as that front rod end has enough rotational articulation in it, I think Blake 27 has it figured out. Simple, looks strong, and adjustable if need be.
I've got a '39 Olds with rubber bushed locating arms. I am going to add a torque arm to mount atop one of the arms near the pivot. Can I keep the bushings or do I need to fab steel arm mounts to weld to 12 bolt? 455 TH400, M/T 29x12.5
I did it different, was told it wouldn’t work, but it’s been run about 10 years so I don’t know when it’s supposed to fall apart.
I agree, Blake 27s is all that’s probably needed and is true simplicity but I don’t know why it would need any adjustment? You would have to change the rear mounting points to need any adjustment. Not criticising the comment,just a thought.