ron67fb
Founding Member
Which MII kits include that diagonal brace?It's more like this
Excuse me, but I use paint shop PRO!I'm gonna let it ride for a while to see where the awesome paint shop action leads!
Which MII kits include that diagonal brace?It's more like this
Excuse me, but I use paint shop PRO!I'm gonna let it ride for a while to see where the awesome paint shop action leads!
Yes grasshopper, you see what I've been trying to say. I oversimplified it a bit perhaps and under emphasized the role of the unibody structure all to make my point, but that's the gist of it.Reen,
I'm just illustrating that the force makes no difference on the shock towers because the MII suspension is on the frame rails and the frame rails and body extend back and work like a leaver. There is no weight in the engine compartment sheet metal.
It's just like you said, when it was original the springs put weight on the shock tower, but the shock towers too were welded to the frame rails. the only thing i could see the braces for were tower stability. and add rigidity to the compartment's walls. But the car's weigh has nothing to do with the sheet metal; it's on the rails.
Basic engineering.
Yes grasshopper, you see what I've been trying to say. I oversimplified it a bit perhaps and under emphasized the role of the unibody structure all to make my point, but that's the gist of it.
It's been a fun discussion so far and would be a heck of a lot easier if we were all sitting around my place with a half-built car with an MII (got it), a giant whiteboard (got it), and a keg (you bet I'd get it).
I'd even pour one for mikethebike.
http://www.heidts.com/heip32-3.htm
If you scroll down to the second product on the page you see Inner Fender Panles. These don't come with the Heidts kit, they are extra, obviously.
The MII front suspension setup that I have personally seen on a car didn't put these in. They eliminated the shock towers completely and left the area wide open (looked really terrible). I didn't have a chance to drive or take a ride in the car but I did talk to the owner. He was not happy with the way the car went around corners.
Thanks Reen, There's a reason I'm running the MII, I spent a lot of time checking it all out and talking to R&C before I bought it. He changed the geometry of the system and gave me tips to better set it up for my driving preferences. You can still play around with a little, I got a lot of advice from a lot of different types of racers.
Plus this a just a bad ass street car. Hopefully it will be done soon; The guy working on it for me right now has pissed me off a lot!
I had it soda blasted when he started working on it, the dude kept putting of the primer even though I bugged him; it got surface rust, He said he'd clean it back off; and he just went and primed over the rust on the interior of the body, sure you won't see it, but I know it's there and I'm worried in a year to two I'll start getting bubbles. I hate people now doing things right the first time when it's so much easier. It drives me nuts. Because I always have to fix it when they do it wrong, it's that way at my job and that way in life!
BTW: I got the magazine today; the car looks great!
Wow. If the installer was the type to leave gaping holes in the engine compartment where the shock towers used to be imagine what other corners they may have cut. I wouldn't ride in it if I were you.
i agree with rusty, if you are going to install the mustang ll suspension, definately do it right. just adding the mustang ll crossmember doesnt make for a proper install.
Now we're back to square one. Why do you think extra structure has to be added to make for a proper install?
Doing it right means doing it right, as in cutting and measuring everything carefully, making great welds with proper penetration, and patching the aprons.
i've seen stock frame rails with the stock suspension still attached crumple, crack, rust through and fail without the added load or added welds to convince me NOT to weld anything to them.
if you replace the factory rails with a thicker rail and add structural bracing up to the firewall, like the Martz kit does then i don't have a problem with it.
the only other issue i have with doing a M-II suspension is that it makes it almost impossible to ever put the car back to stock in the future for you/me or anyone else.
Well then by that logic you should be telling everyone to add additional bracing to their Mustang. A rusty car is a rusty car regardless of the suspension in it and it's going to have problems.
i usually do. at the very least an export brace and monte carlo bar and generally subframe connectors as well, even if they are only bolt in connectors.
i wasn't really talking about cars that are in danger of rusting in half, though. but every early stang has some rust at least on the insides of the frame rails, where you can't see it.
Not simple, but a little frame rail patching and a pair of the new complete shock tower assemblies would do it. It's probably easier to undo it than it was to do it in the first place.
Yes grasshopper, you see what I've been trying to say. I oversimplified it a bit perhaps and under emphasized the role of the unibody structure all to make my point, but that's the gist of it.
It's been a fun discussion so far and would be a heck of a lot easier if we were all sitting around my place with a half-built car with an MII (got it), a giant whiteboard (got it), and a keg (you bet I'd get it).
I'd even pour one for mikethebike.
what kind of oil pan is that?
I don't know what will fit on my 532 with my suspension. I heard canton has a pan for a 460 but i am not sure it will clear the stroke of the motor.
here's the way i see it. any flex AT ALL will eventually start to cause cracking near the welds and most likely on the thin sheetmetal orginal frame rails which could lead to everything forward of those rails snapping off, if you trust it enough then that's fine, i don't, plain and simple.
i've seen stock frame rails with the stock suspension still attached crumple, crack, rust through and fail without the added load or added welds to convince me NOT to weld anything to them.
if you replace the factory rails with a thicker rail and add structural bracing up to the firewall, like the Martz kit does then i don't have a problem with it.
the only other issue i have with doing a M-II suspension is that it makes it almost impossible to ever put the car back to stock in the future for you/me or anyone else.
Just make sure it's REAL beer and not any of that 'light' crap.
"Life's too short to drink cheap beer."
And to support the theory that the rails hold the weight, the BOSS-302s were reinforced at the bottom of the spring tower to keep it from tearing under hard cornering.