merry Christmas everyone, I just got done looking at the snoopy hot rod , I loved the look of that axle in front realy made it look mean, heres my question I have a 47 ford car axle, springs , steering box everything , has anyone else ever used one in a model a , boy I would love to try it , thanks guys
The axle might be a little tricky as the perch pins are far out towards the kingpins. That results in a lessened turn radius as the tires can hit the split wishbones. Some people have bent the wishbone arms to compensate. No split...no problem! You can also get a custom main leaf to allow you to use early perch pins with the shackle bushings to get your spring above the axle. It's perhaps a bit of extra work to use the late axle BUT its been done many times so theres really nothing mysterious about it. Most people seem to go with the early style axle and use the later spindles, along with the brakes if thats the style you intend to use...or you can get or adapt various styles of different drum or disc brakes as well.
so snoopy model a survivor { thread} rry I just joined not long ago , kind of why I asked that was the first I seen
http://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/threads/snoopy-model-a-hot-rod-survivor.942245/ Link to not only the snoopy thread but a ton of photos that will illustrate how you could mount it. As stated its not unusual to use but you need to keep the wishbone in tact or figure out one of the many tricks to get around them being connected so close to the wheels
right now I haven't boxed the frame or anything but , I have a 32 front axle with 47 ford spindels and brakes , outside the fact the later axle setup would look cool I'm not sur all the work would be worth it , I been searching for a build thread where someone did it but no luck that front crossmember has me kind of stumped
Stock, a '47 axle is "spring-ahead". It will look awkward on an earlier car. To use it any other way will require specialized parts and some work on your part. If you already have a '32 axle, I'm kinda of mystified why you are even considering the '47. Grab the brakes and sell the rest to a street rodder building a '47 with disc brakes.
if you have a 32 axle that isn't trash you should use that. A 47 is too wide and when the bones are split as Hackerbilt said it cuts your steering radius way down. Take the wishbones from the 47 and split them to use on the 32 axle youll be way ahead of the game with it that way. too use the whole 47 assemble it put the front wheels behind the crossmember sice it is a front spring set up. that then puts your radiator in front of the center of the front wheels and just looks weird. lots of people have done it but then again lots of people wear their pants half hanging off there ass, and we all know that looks stupid as hell. Just cause somebody else does it don't make it right....
I thought that to ,that's why I figured on using the 32 ford axle I alredy have the spindels and break backing plates on , is there anyway I could at least use the 47 ford steering sector
I had an old, dropped. 47 axle under a model A with split bones. Bought perches and used a model A spring with a reversed eye main leaf that I had made at a spring shop to convert to spring over configuration.
Are you looking for something like this? Notice I did not split the wish bone. This Roadster is going to be full fendered when done. And yes,, the wheel base is stock to Model A. The Wizzard
I wonder the 47 ford sector was set up as a cross steer where the draglink whent sideways and hooked on the passenger side spindle could this be rigged up for the other type steering , I new at this steering thing
ya pist-n-broke that's it , that looks great , I notice it set the way it should , with the front far enough ahead , did you move the crossmember ahead , and is it the 47 ford with
The frame is built using Model A rails and a Model AA front cross member in stock rivet hole location. To much to explain so just take a look at it without the Body on. The Wizzard
man thanks one thing how many inchs back does the spring on center measure from the tip of the frame horns
Here is the Pile I started with. Tip of frame horn to center of spring is same as any STOCK Model A is.
I just went to my shop and measured from tip of front horn to middle of spring on 28 model A Don 11 inches
That would be true in the event your frame rails are stock. Notice also my rear Axle is a 36 with spring behind. My wheel base is STOCK model A. Something had to change. I started out with a Vision, a Plan and a formula to get there long before I started the parts pile. I don't think like Normal People. I also place Zero value on the How to Do it A-V8 books in print. The Wizzard
Correct; New overall rail length is longer than Stock Model A rails with wheel base of front and rear Axles same as Stock Model A. The Wizzard
I can't answer that off the Top of my head. It's been to long since I built the Frame. For you to figure it out just measure from center of spring to center of Axle. If I remember correct it was about 3.5" front and 6.5" rear and a total of 10". Don't do anything with those numbers until you verify them. The Wizzard
man you guys are talking me right back into it , I'm starting to get it now , I have a bare model a frame and the 47 axle when the weather clears I'm going to take it in the shop see how it looks