Does anyone know the stock dimension from the bushing centers to the ball joint center.
Julian...maybe I don't need to modify my upper a-arms.
OzGT5 (Guest)
Looks like they may have been modded to fit a different ball joint Tom. Certainly longer that's clear.
Robert, I'm so glad you posted your suspension arm pictures. I have been looking into either buying new upper a-arms to lengthen them to increase the camber adjustment, or modify the ones I had. I assumed mine were the stock arms. But now realize that the bushings on those arms are the only poly bushings on the car. The rest are rubber, so I'm assuming they are a vendor modified arm.
OzGT5 (Guest)
Glad to help Tom.
This forum is great and sometimes we just stumble upon things to help each other out.
I'm still endebted to Devin for sending me that tracing. What a legend, saved me so much time and the result was better than I would have done without the original outline.
This forum is great and sometimes we just stumble upon things to help each other out.
I'm still endebted to Devin for sending me that tracing. What a legend, saved me so much time and the result was better than I would have done without the original outline.
Robert,
I’m glad that I could help out.
I have also been impressed with the generosity of the individuals on the Pantera forum. Thanks again for the kind words.
Devin
P.S. Your car looks great.
I’m glad that I could help out.
I have also been impressed with the generosity of the individuals on the Pantera forum. Thanks again for the kind words.
Devin
P.S. Your car looks great.
OzGT5 (Guest)
It will look better in a few more days once the clutch cylinders are back in it and it gets back on the road.
A few more things to fix between then and now though:
- Passenger window doesn't work.
- Drivers window slow.
- Leaikng windscreen seal.
- Front wheel aliginment.
- Sort out the throttle cable/linkage which is too heavy.
- Put the new rubber/felt trim around the drivers door.
Then just need to wait a bit longer till Kirk sends my new short bumpers and I can remove the USA shark nose.
I see a light at the end of the tunnel........
A few more things to fix between then and now though:
- Passenger window doesn't work.
- Drivers window slow.
- Leaikng windscreen seal.
- Front wheel aliginment.
- Sort out the throttle cable/linkage which is too heavy.
- Put the new rubber/felt trim around the drivers door.
Then just need to wait a bit longer till Kirk sends my new short bumpers and I can remove the USA shark nose.
I see a light at the end of the tunnel........
OzGT5 (Guest)
Just another thing,
In you guys opinion, what wheel alignment settings would work best on my car?
In you guys opinion, what wheel alignment settings would work best on my car?
OzGT5 (Guest)
Mike Dailey suggests that the following are the factory settings:
Front Settings
Camber, 1/8 degrees neg to 1/8 degrees pos.
Caster, 2-3/4 degrees pos.
Toe-in, 1/8"
Back Settings
Camber, 3/8 degrees neg to 5/8 degrees neg
Toe-in 1/8" to 3/16"
His car was aligned and the finished specifications were:
Front Settings
Camber, Left 0.5 degrees, Right 0.5 degrees.
Caster, Left 1.8 degrees, Right 1.4 degrees.
Toe-in total, 0.12"
Back Settings
Camber, Left -0.6 degrees, Right -0.6 degrees
Toe-in total, 0.21"
My car uses 11" and 13" wheels and the fronts have a 32mm spacer to fill the guards properly as the wheel offset appears to be wrong. It also has Johnny Woods castor mod to the upper front arms.
Normally these vehicle mods would require a variation to 'standard' wheel alignment specs.
Your thoughts Gentlemen?
Front Settings
Camber, 1/8 degrees neg to 1/8 degrees pos.
Caster, 2-3/4 degrees pos.
Toe-in, 1/8"
Back Settings
Camber, 3/8 degrees neg to 5/8 degrees neg
Toe-in 1/8" to 3/16"
His car was aligned and the finished specifications were:
Front Settings
Camber, Left 0.5 degrees, Right 0.5 degrees.
Caster, Left 1.8 degrees, Right 1.4 degrees.
Toe-in total, 0.12"
Back Settings
Camber, Left -0.6 degrees, Right -0.6 degrees
Toe-in total, 0.21"
My car uses 11" and 13" wheels and the fronts have a 32mm spacer to fill the guards properly as the wheel offset appears to be wrong. It also has Johnny Woods castor mod to the upper front arms.
Normally these vehicle mods would require a variation to 'standard' wheel alignment specs.
Your thoughts Gentlemen?
Keep in mind on 71 cars like mine there is no front caster adjustment.
Mike
Mike
OzGT5 (Guest)
Good point Mike. I hear they drive best with about 5 - 6 degrees of caster? Your opinion?
Yes they do.
One other thing that is sometimes over looked is how the overall stance of the car impacts the caster. They seem to handle better at speed with a slight nose down stance, but any nose down subtracts from the desirable caster. So a slight nose down stance is better for the caster than a bunch of nose down. The other thing to consider about the overall stance is that the top of the door (below the window frame) is not parallel with the bottom of the pitch weld. It angles up toward the front of the car, so the car will look like it is running up hill if the pinch weld is parallel to the ground. From my measurements and calculations a 1” difference between the front and back pinch weld equals 1 degree. Mine is a tad over 3/8” lower in front or .375+ degrees nose down. That stance puts the top of the door just very slightly lower in the front in relation to the ground. A lot to think about, but it is amazing how getting the car to sit with a good stance and ride height makes such a huge difference in its appearance and handling.
Mike
One other thing that is sometimes over looked is how the overall stance of the car impacts the caster. They seem to handle better at speed with a slight nose down stance, but any nose down subtracts from the desirable caster. So a slight nose down stance is better for the caster than a bunch of nose down. The other thing to consider about the overall stance is that the top of the door (below the window frame) is not parallel with the bottom of the pitch weld. It angles up toward the front of the car, so the car will look like it is running up hill if the pinch weld is parallel to the ground. From my measurements and calculations a 1” difference between the front and back pinch weld equals 1 degree. Mine is a tad over 3/8” lower in front or .375+ degrees nose down. That stance puts the top of the door just very slightly lower in the front in relation to the ground. A lot to think about, but it is amazing how getting the car to sit with a good stance and ride height makes such a huge difference in its appearance and handling.
Mike
OzGT5 (Guest)
Another fun day!!
Clutch slave went in fine and then it was time for the master. That was fun! Shame the two bolts from inside are not captive so you can just locate the master, do it up tight and then work on getting that horrible clevis pin into place.
That simple little job took hours. I ended up with the steering wheel off, and the seat out (again) and there was just enough room to get it on after many, many new swear words were heard in the shed.
The U shaped clevis arangement on the end of the master cylinder rod had to be wound out fully on the thread before I was able to get the clevis pin to line up with the clutch pivot point and the clevis holes. Seemed a bit strange as I can't remeber it being wound out that far before.
The clutch was then bled but the take up is too high, like too much pedal travel before it bites. I don't know where or how this is adjusted, but the manual speaks of a 3/4" clearance at the slave. My slave rod was not adjuted during the rebuild and was actually pretty well frozen with rust in the threads. It took a lot to clear it, and in the end I wound it in to the absolute shortest length and then slipped it between the clevis on the clutch fork and managed to get the pin in place.
Everything appears to work, and I can get gears much smoother than ever before with the engine idling.
Clutch slave went in fine and then it was time for the master. That was fun! Shame the two bolts from inside are not captive so you can just locate the master, do it up tight and then work on getting that horrible clevis pin into place.
That simple little job took hours. I ended up with the steering wheel off, and the seat out (again) and there was just enough room to get it on after many, many new swear words were heard in the shed.
The U shaped clevis arangement on the end of the master cylinder rod had to be wound out fully on the thread before I was able to get the clevis pin to line up with the clutch pivot point and the clevis holes. Seemed a bit strange as I can't remeber it being wound out that far before.
The clutch was then bled but the take up is too high, like too much pedal travel before it bites. I don't know where or how this is adjusted, but the manual speaks of a 3/4" clearance at the slave. My slave rod was not adjuted during the rebuild and was actually pretty well frozen with rust in the threads. It took a lot to clear it, and in the end I wound it in to the absolute shortest length and then slipped it between the clevis on the clutch fork and managed to get the pin in place.
Everything appears to work, and I can get gears much smoother than ever before with the engine idling.
OzGT5 (Guest)
Continued:
The clutch take up is still quite high and I would have liked to have seen the take up commence a bit closer to the floor for better control and with the slave cylinder rod all the way in to it's shortest extent, there is no room for freeplay adjustment at the slave.
Also, and this seems a bit strange, at the pivot point of the clutch pedal arm there is a metal hook that isn't attached to anything. Just floating, and maybe even looks like it may have at one stage been some type of pedal return spring but is now broken. I'll try and get a picture of it, but it's in a difficult position.
At present clutch pedal is only returning due to the system pressure, and most clutch pedals I'm used to acutally have a wound tension spring on the pedal arms. Any clues as to this guys?
The clutch take up is still quite high and I would have liked to have seen the take up commence a bit closer to the floor for better control and with the slave cylinder rod all the way in to it's shortest extent, there is no room for freeplay adjustment at the slave.
Also, and this seems a bit strange, at the pivot point of the clutch pedal arm there is a metal hook that isn't attached to anything. Just floating, and maybe even looks like it may have at one stage been some type of pedal return spring but is now broken. I'll try and get a picture of it, but it's in a difficult position.
At present clutch pedal is only returning due to the system pressure, and most clutch pedals I'm used to acutally have a wound tension spring on the pedal arms. Any clues as to this guys?
OzGT5 (Guest)
Here's a couple of pics of this potentially broken clutch pedal return spring. It's just hanging there, attached to nothing and rattling around.
Any ideas?
Any ideas?
Attachments
OzGT5 (Guest)
And another?
Attachments
OzGT5 (Guest)
Here you can see the clutch slave cylinder with the rod fully adjusted in to minimum length. I had to shorten this by about 16mm to fit it back together with the rebuilt and sleeved slave cylinder.
All seems well. I have no clutch creep in neutral on a perfectly flat surface, gears select perfectly, and the only real issue is the clutch engages a bit high. Given what the manual says about correct clutch adjustment though, I'm a little concerned that I haven't got it adjusted right, and the manual instructions are a bit off!
The manual is far from clear on adjustment:
- Remove the adjustment stop screw and nut and discard!
- Remove rubber boot and back off the pushrod locknut.
- Adjust length of push rod to give 3/4" of free play and clutch pedal retaining locknut?
Now in that third instruction there has to be a typo, as that makes no sense, even to an Aussie.
Like what is the "clutch pedal retaining locknut"?
All seems well. I have no clutch creep in neutral on a perfectly flat surface, gears select perfectly, and the only real issue is the clutch engages a bit high. Given what the manual says about correct clutch adjustment though, I'm a little concerned that I haven't got it adjusted right, and the manual instructions are a bit off!
The manual is far from clear on adjustment:
- Remove the adjustment stop screw and nut and discard!
- Remove rubber boot and back off the pushrod locknut.
- Adjust length of push rod to give 3/4" of free play and clutch pedal retaining locknut?
Now in that third instruction there has to be a typo, as that makes no sense, even to an Aussie.
Like what is the "clutch pedal retaining locknut"?
Attachments
OzGT5 (Guest)
Okay, disregard the spring thing. I located in the parts manual that there are two springs. One on the brake and one on the clutch. I went back down and crawled under there and sure enuff, the brake spring is there. Two full loops and then a tab off one side that wraps around the pedal shaft.
Question is, if this part is available, can it be fitted without removing the pedal box? There appears to be a grub screw at the head of the clutch pedal shaft but unless this is on some sort of a keyway, removal in situ would appear to be very difficult.
Where would I try to locate this spring? Wilkinsons or maybe Kirk Evans?
Question is, if this part is available, can it be fitted without removing the pedal box? There appears to be a grub screw at the head of the clutch pedal shaft but unless this is on some sort of a keyway, removal in situ would appear to be very difficult.
Where would I try to locate this spring? Wilkinsons or maybe Kirk Evans?
OzGT5 (Guest)
quote:The other thing to consider about the overall stance is that the top of the door (below the window frame) is not parallel with the bottom of the pitch weld. It angles up toward the front of the car, so the car will look like it is running up hill if the pinch weld is parallel to the ground. From my measurements and calculations a 1” difference between the front and back pinch weld equals 1 degree. Mine is a tad over 3/8” lower in front or .375+ degrees nose down. That stance puts the top of the door just very slightly lower in the front in relation to the ground.
Thanks Mike. By the door pinchweld, I take it you mean the one along the bottom of the door opening. Do you just lay a 3' level along there on flat ground and you set yours 3/8" lower at the front of the door opening? Over the length of the car this must relay to a lot lower at the front?
Quite difficult to set these cars to a 'proper' height as there really isn't any common points as the cars vary so much due to wheels / tyres / spoliers / body kits etc.
Spring shop in Dandenong would most likely have one if you knew what you wanted, or they could make you one.
OzGT5 (Guest)
Thanks Paul,
I have half of it. I managed to spread it enough to get over the main connecting rod and got it off. Confirmed that it has broken in the centre.
Found this picture and wih my half a spring shop could possibly make it.
I have half of it. I managed to spread it enough to get over the main connecting rod and got it off. Confirmed that it has broken in the centre.
Found this picture and wih my half a spring shop could possibly make it.