DJs74
Bronco Guru
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2014
- Messages
- 1,135
Just out of curiosity, is there a formal procedure on the installation process of C Bushings with regard to the tightening / torquing pattern?
When I did this last year, I ran into a couple of things...
* with new bushings, the bolts were a little short because the bushings were new and unforgiving
* my approach to overcome this (right or wrong I don't know??) was: I hooked a tie down strap, the ratcheting type, to the hub and frame which enabled me to pull the Dana 44 toward the rear and compressed the rear bushing enough to get the front cap and bolts on and started. I had to put the radius arm back in the bracket to make this work and once I got all the bolts started, I removed the radius arm again so it was free (so I could compare it to the opposite side later)
* My 1st - 2nd - 3rd - 4th attempts were failures to get both radius arms equal height -which is kind of where my question comes from
I used a crisscross pattern (from the front looking back), top left / bottom right / bottom left / top right until the cap bottomed out. When that didn't work (to achieve equal height of radius arm at large threaded end), I loosened all bolts to the point where only a couple threads were attached and tried again - still using crisscross and failed again. Then I tried crisscross until I reached maybe a 1/4" gap to finish - drew both bottom up tight, then both top, still no good.
I think my final attempt was crisscross to 1/4" to go, then drew both top bolts, then both bottom
I might be doing C bushings again in the future on another Bronco and just thought I'd ask some advice of what's worked for others.
Also, during the adjustment phase, is there any possibility that you can ruin your bushings by drawing them up wrong on the first few attempts and that they may take a bad set and that could be why they are so hard to get final adjustment on? My whole adjustment period was over the course of several days but I never drove it anywhere but they were drawn up incorrectly for a little while at first. I don't think rubber bushings would take a bad set unless heat was applied but I'm not familiar with how the urethane reacts?
Just wondering if I did something wrong initially on mine and there is a better procedure from the start or if this happens to be one of those "results vary" and everyone has to try their own approach
thanks,
DJs74
When I did this last year, I ran into a couple of things...
* with new bushings, the bolts were a little short because the bushings were new and unforgiving
* my approach to overcome this (right or wrong I don't know??) was: I hooked a tie down strap, the ratcheting type, to the hub and frame which enabled me to pull the Dana 44 toward the rear and compressed the rear bushing enough to get the front cap and bolts on and started. I had to put the radius arm back in the bracket to make this work and once I got all the bolts started, I removed the radius arm again so it was free (so I could compare it to the opposite side later)
* My 1st - 2nd - 3rd - 4th attempts were failures to get both radius arms equal height -which is kind of where my question comes from
I used a crisscross pattern (from the front looking back), top left / bottom right / bottom left / top right until the cap bottomed out. When that didn't work (to achieve equal height of radius arm at large threaded end), I loosened all bolts to the point where only a couple threads were attached and tried again - still using crisscross and failed again. Then I tried crisscross until I reached maybe a 1/4" gap to finish - drew both bottom up tight, then both top, still no good.
I think my final attempt was crisscross to 1/4" to go, then drew both top bolts, then both bottom
I might be doing C bushings again in the future on another Bronco and just thought I'd ask some advice of what's worked for others.
Also, during the adjustment phase, is there any possibility that you can ruin your bushings by drawing them up wrong on the first few attempts and that they may take a bad set and that could be why they are so hard to get final adjustment on? My whole adjustment period was over the course of several days but I never drove it anywhere but they were drawn up incorrectly for a little while at first. I don't think rubber bushings would take a bad set unless heat was applied but I'm not familiar with how the urethane reacts?
Just wondering if I did something wrong initially on mine and there is a better procedure from the start or if this happens to be one of those "results vary" and everyone has to try their own approach
thanks,
DJs74