Over the years I have seen a lot of ways to lower a car. Springs heated with a torch, cut coils, clamps on the coils, shorter springs rattling loose in the perches ...etc.
While doing the brakes on my friends lesabre I spotted this lovely mod.
![photo 20160123_140325_zpsmmcwibxo.jpg](http://i459.photobucket.com/albums/qq313/ditch_digger/20160123_140325_zpsmmcwibxo.jpg)
Coils compressed and welded together
![photo 20160123_140317_zpsgfk18cyy.jpg](http://i459.photobucket.com/albums/qq313/ditch_digger/20160123_140317_zpsgfk18cyy.jpg)
One weld being broken explains why it lists to one side.
This looks to have been done over 30 years ago. It's a shame since new springs aren't in his budget.
bluej
SuperDork
1/24/16 12:24 p.m.
springs are like $8/each at the yard. there's gotta be something there that'll work.
new springs are like $50 a pair at any parts store..
More like $120 a pair for an early 60's B body. Just ordered a set of four for a 59 impala.
H&H classic has 1.5" lowering springs for $119. That is the route I recommended. But I'm not doing that until he also buys shocks and that turns into a while we are in there.... kinda thing. This car has been off the road for 18 years and needs every little thing.
Why wouldn't you just cut a coil? Hell, torching a coil off because you don't what to disassemble would be safer than this.
never seen that, have seen a civic with no springs.
Never seen it done that way, makes sense though, deletes a coil without taking the suspension apart or waving an acetylene torch around. The redneck in me would be tempted to weld it back up in the meantime, I mean, it did hold up ok beyond the crappy weld failing.