Moving along on this project, the goal for the day was to paint the raw fiberglass interior and change the color of the frame from red-oxide to gloss black. I had already removed the suspension and sanded the frame and interior in preparation.
The "paint stuff" part worked out just fine. The white is a huge improvement over the mottled raw fiberglass look. The black frame looks much better than the poorly applied dull red that was on there originally.
Waiting for paint to dry, I decided to clean up the front suspension in anticipation of just bolting it on when the paint dried. As I was wiping this upper A-arm down with solvent, Petey's eyecrometer spotted something wrong. The supossed-to-be- flat surface where the balljoint bolts on is bent.
One of the clues was that the upper balljoint did not bolt down flat on the surface. This is the other side. It may or may not be right, but it is at least on a single plane.
Moving to the lower A-Arm. I noticed a lot of grease around the lower ball joint area. When I started to clean it up, I noted that the boot is not sealed to the screw-in ballhoint and in fact could not be attached in any way-shape or form.
Not sure if these threads are correct or not, they look more like ACME threads to me
And then I note that the cotter pin does not quite line up with the castle nut cut-outs.
Also want to have a think about the fact that the inner pivots on the lower A-arm are not really concentric. The parts go together because the long bolt that goes across is a bit loose,
Well, at least the coil overs are cool right? Alden was a good name back in the day and even though they are over 30 years old, they don't have a mile on them. Bet they will look nice with a bit of polish.
Supposed to be gas charged, but the rod stays down if I push it in and it has to be pulled back out. The damping force is there but no gas extension. Not sure if that is a big deal.
I did not like this bite out of the lower mount. Not a part I want to have break on my suspension
The notch was created to make room for the a-arm articulation. I would have relieved the a-arm first.
Of course the steering rack also wants to play this game. Not a huge deal but the tie-rods are different. One side is from a Fox Body Mustang and the other is from a Dogde Omni matching the steering rack. They are 1/2" different in lenght, but that is not a game stopper, just not ideal.
The fun never ends does it? The good news is that even though I have no idea who put this suspension together, it is pretty standard Mustang II stuff and should be possible to source from Allstar or other vendors. Will probably look for a single vendor solution. Standby.