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Two
quick questions.
1. I have heard TONS of theory and conjecture,
but nothing definitive. Have you ever found a relationship (good or
bad) between mounting a wishbone above or below the rear end housing?
I have heard that one way will control roll rotation slightly better
than the other. Is this true?
2. Are there benefits to running dual
frame rails all the way to the front of the car, or does it do the
same thing if you tie them in at the mid-plate area?
Thanks a lot,
Michael McCabe
Michael:
1. The wishbone definitely needs to be
mounted on the bottom of the housing. Because the 4-link bars are
on a push (compressing/pushing forward) they need to be triangulated
on the bottom. The only reason people put them on the top is to make
it easier to install and remove the third member. Performance-wise,
they should always be put on the bottom. It triangulates the car and
when the rear suspension does have some body roll to it, it will rotate
off the bottom bars and not the top bars. If it rotates off the centerline
of the top bars, the bottom bars become unsquare with the chassis
and cause the car to move around and become unstable. Always mount
on the bottom!
2. When we build double frame rail cars
we take them to the front. We feel that it ties the car in better
if you go all the way to the front. Definitely tie it into the mid-mount
area too, but it is better if you go all the way to the front.
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