How much caster do you need? Just do the moog offset bushings and call it good. They give the caster and a maintain the camber.Yeah....so how about MORE chatter about welding or modifying this stuff to keep it CHEAP ?
How much caster do you need? Just do the moog offset bushings and call it good. They give the caster and a maintain the camber.Yeah....so how about MORE chatter about welding or modifying this stuff to keep it CHEAP ?
oh, i feel ya. i'm very much on the same page.Oh, I have the money. It is not about that in the least.
I started with a junkyard mindset and it stuck with me. I worked construction for years and was a damned good framer. I was the guy that didn't mind using up the scraps, the imperfect wood, the leftovers. It was a challenge to make it work but I know I saved my employers a bunch of money.
I worked as if the lumber actually was limited. This is not a bad quality to have.
With cars, I love to find ways to improve things without defaulting to buying something new. I've modified sway bars to fit cars that they weren't designed for. The Dart has a front bar from a 73-87 Chevy C30 truck. The rear bar is from an 82-92 Z28. The rear bar on my 2007 Dodge truck is from a Chevy Suburban.
It is fun for me.
I wish that I knew an alignment guy that liked to tinker in his free time.
I estimated adding 1/4" just as a starting point. Something like this could be mocked up on a test chassis and measured and recorded. The tubular arms that are purported to add up to 3 degrees or more could be measured, "mapped" so to speak and then the stock arms could be measured to compare.
I have a buddy's car in the shop out back, a '68 Satellite with Firm Feel UCAs. I could measure them and compare them to my stock arms on the shelf.
For example, take the stock arm below...
View attachment 1716206040
I could measure between the zerk and the forward bushing and the same between the zerk and rearmost bushing and then compare the numbers to the Firm Feel arms. Just some bonehead logic at work here but I'd suspect that the aftermarket arms would have a longer front measurement than stock and a shorter rear number, effectively moving the top of the spindle/knuckle rearward.
By the way, what so many people call a spindle is actually a steering knuckle. The spindle is technically the horizontal section that the hub and brake attach to. Most people call the whole thing a spindle, just like how "emergency brake" gets used to describe what is actually a Parking Brake, a Sure Grip gets called a Posi, etc.
I really like this idea. It might make a nice side hustle for someone with the requisite skills and tools. Increased caster with OEM appearance for a price below aftermarket tubular UCAs.If it were me, I'd just use a hole saw a bit larger in diameter than the upper ball joint threads. Mount the UCA in a vice or fixture so the ball joint is at 0°, drill out the circle containing the ball joint mount, and then tilt the mount until you have the desired caster improvement. Weld the ball joint mount back in.
That way, there's no change in the length of the control arm, so the track width isn't changed any. I know that would be a small amount since you're only extending one leg of the UCA, but it would still change it some.
View attachment 1716206214
After welding the mount back in you could weld in an additional "ring" around the shoulder of the ball joint if you were concerned about the strength.
I really like this idea. It might make a nice side hustle for someone with the requisite skills and tools.
It wouldn’t be super difficult. You can see the jig that was used for the TransAm series modification, it’s pretty darn simple.
I’m just not sure it’d be worth it. Even with a nice jig and clean control arms you’re looking at a couple hours labor, plus welding supplies. Add 2-way shipping into that and to make any money at it the price wouldn’t be all that much less than a set of tubular arms, especially adding in the cost of new bushings and ball joints since those are included in a lot of the tubular replacements.
Plus you’d no doubt get some control arms sent that were pretty rough, so then you’d have to spend more time cleaning or even make the judgment call not to work on some of them because of their condition.
Not saying it’s impossible or anything, but I won’t be setting up to do it.
Building super stocks and super modifiers, we were limited by rule to using stock control arms, but made no mention of "altered".
We were using Camaro clips, and butchered the control arms something fierce, then crashed em, not by choice, to "test" it.
Chop and weld away, all's good.
Cadillac had an interesting upper ball joints.
I used to bend the outer end of the lower control arm, then weld in the supports to "box" the control arm .
Using Moog offset bushes, I wasn't able to achieve more than 3*
caster, and most customers bitched about heavy steering at 3.
I usually set them up at 2 1/2 max, especially with manual steering.
There is also a fatigue issue some folks might have cranking the wheel .
Anyone given thought to what happens to toe when caster is way up?
Wouldn't the ball joint have to be relocated, not just the angle changed? With the proper fixtures though, your proposed process would be relatively easy and have minimal knock-on effects. Fewer risks too since the integrity of the arms is retained.
Wouldn't the ball joint have to be relocated, not just the angle changed? With the proper fixtures though, your proposed process would be relatively easy and have minimal knock-on effects. Fewer risks too since the integrity of the arms is retained.
If you're going to this trouble, we just chopsawed the end of the control arm off, weld a flat plate with a 4 bolt chev joint thru it.
Support and gusset as nec.
It'll look fabbed, be strong as hell, and ball joint attitude is totally up to you.
Just saying, - that's what we did a lotta times.
Exactly, that would be the way to do it. Add a plate like this
https://www.speedwaymotors.com/Upper-A-Arm-Ball-Joint-Plate-Only,39783.html
View attachment 1716206265
End up with something like this but plated into the stock UCA instead of tubular. And no worries about stripping ball joint mounting threads in
there would be absolutely zero money in it (see below) and the amount of people interested in stock look + increased caster could be easily satiated with offset moog uppers. if you're looking for more than 3* it's likely you're beyond stock appearing rim & tire combo, anyway.I really like this idea. It might make a nice side hustle for someone with the requisite skills and tools. Increased caster with OEM appearance for a price below aftermarket tubular UCAs.
all of this.It wouldn’t be super difficult. You can see the jig that was used for the TransAm series modification, it’s pretty darn simple.
I’m just not sure it’d be worth it. Even with a nice jig and clean control arms you’re looking at a couple hours labor, plus welding supplies. Add 2-way shipping into that and to make any money at it the price wouldn’t be all that much less than a set of tubular arms, especially adding in the cost of new bushings and ball joints since those are included in a lot of the tubular replacements.
Plus you’d no doubt get some control arms sent that were pretty rough, so then you’d have to spend more time cleaning or even make the judgment call not to work on some of them because of their condition.
Not saying it’s impossible or anything, but I won’t be setting up to do it.
Yep, as usual, right on, thank-you.
there would be absolutely zero money in it (see below) and the amount of people interested in stock look + increased caster could be easily satiated with offset moog uppers. if you're looking for more than 3* it's likely you're beyond stock appearing rim & tire combo, anyway.
all of this.
my back of the barroom napkin maths breaks down thusly: 60 for UBJs, 90 for some offsets, let's say you score a set of arms at the yard for 100. so you're 250 into a set before: cleaning, modding, painting, listing, selling (answering dumb questions), and shipping.
if your profit aim is 10 bucks and a burrito, then, sure i suppose it's worth it. but same as 72, i'm not gearing up to do even stock arms when you can get them (if available) at $250-- even though who knows what balljoints or bushings are in the arm. because people see "NEW" and $250 so why would they want to buy a set of "reconditioned" arms from me for 300? they don't know or care about the balljoints or bushings. they just see a new piece they can snap right on the car and get on with choosing rims or a chrome aircleaner or whatever.
@HemiDenny Have you checked this not common scenario out with your UCA's ?
View attachment 1716205848
View attachment 1716205849
there would be absolutely zero money in it (see below) and the amount of people interested in stock look + increased caster could be easily satiated with offset moog uppers. if you're looking for more than 3* it's likely you're beyond stock appearing rim & tire combo, anyway.
all of this.
my back of the barroom napkin maths breaks down thusly: 60 for UBJs, 90 for some offsets, let's say you score a set of arms at the yard for 100. so you're 250 into a set before: cleaning, modding, painting, listing, selling (answering dumb questions), and shipping.
if your profit aim is 10 bucks and a burrito, then, sure i suppose it's worth it. but same as 72, i'm not gearing up to do even stock arms when you can get them (if available) at $250-- even though who knows what balljoints or bushings are in the arm. because people see "NEW" and $250 so why would they want to buy a set of "reconditioned" arms from me for 300? they don't know or care about the balljoints or bushings. they just see a new piece they can snap right on the car and get on with choosing rims or a chrome aircleaner or whatever.
I've sold over 500 sets of HDK OEM replacement UCAs, and have never ran across this issue. Not to say it is not there, just never ran across it.
I will file it in my back pocket.... just in case