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Trailing Arm support brackets


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Hi All, as you may or may not know I am in the process of a body off full resto.

Before I put the body back on the chassis I am toying with the idea of removing the old trailing arm brackets ( which I have lovingly repainted ha ha ) and fitting fully adjustable brackets to make Toe and Camber adjustments easier.

 

Where in your opinion is the best place in the UK to purchase these.

 

Kind regards

 

Nigel (Nibbo)

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When setting the TA brackets from scratch, what is the starting position of the brackets, notches uppermost, and which on the inside and the outside?

I know then you have to do a camber test, and then readjust to get the best setting from the good info from the Buckeye notes.

There doesn't seem to be any info in the service manual, perhaps I missed it?

Some guidance on this would be helpful please.

John

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John

Definite instructions are not a lot of help as so many different spring rates and lengths are now used.

I suggest set it up with similar bracket postions both sides, settle the car by running to and fro, and bouncing it, and measure the camber.

Then use geometry to estimate the change in the inner bracket bolt position. Thus If the top of the tyre is say 10mm too far in at the top you need to move the inner bolt up, and/or the outer down. So the difference between them matches the mm shift you want. Regard the ground as the pivot point and the rest is done with right angle geometry. Like working out a lever.

Do the same both sides and see how much better the camber gets.

Toe shims dont alter the camber much and can be set the same way.

Sound difficult but sketching the 'levers' on paper helps.

Peter

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Harvey,

Like this?

http://www.britishcarforum.com/bcf/showthread.php?76866-TR6-Trailing-Arm-Bracket-Crack

 

 

I had two vertical cracks in each arm of the 'U' that allowed the bolt to come free and the t/a to rise into the wheel arch.

Cause was a side impact a year or so previously that pushed the car sideways.

 

Peter

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