Thread: ladder bar ajustment
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10-29-2006 08:40 PM #1
ladder bar ajustment
i have a 75 vega back halfed.9 inch ford rear end.when im staged and take off it pulls to the left.ladder bars have no ajustment,just a bar going across the ladder bars.how do i adjust that to get it to launch straight?
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10-30-2006 02:06 AM #2
Do you have a track bar or a panhard bar? The best way is to square up the car. Measure the left side wheel base and compare it to the right side wheelbase. Don't your ladder bars have adjustable heim ends on the front end of the bar???Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, Live for Today!
Carroll Shelby
Learning must be difficult for those who already know it all!!!!
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10-30-2006 08:51 AM #3
To add to Dave's comment, have you thought of causes other than the ladder bars? Chassis pre-load? Tire pressure? Is the rear axle perpendicular to the centerline of the car?Jack
Gone to Texas
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10-30-2006 02:17 PM #4
Originally Posted by Dave Severson
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10-30-2006 03:25 PM #5
That diagonal is the track bar. Shortening or lengthening it will square up the rear axle You need to do some careful measuring and make sure that the rear axle is square with the car.
Also, don't forget about tire pressure and spring preload.Jack
Gone to Texas
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10-30-2006 03:55 PM #6
I would also make only one adjustment at a time (Then try a launch) and carfully document every change until you get it straightened out. If you go the wrong direction at some point it will make back tracking much easier. Bad tires could also be a possible cause."PLAN" your life like you will live to 120.
"LIVE" your life like you could die tomorrow.
John 3:16
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10-30-2006 05:49 PM #7
Originally Posted by Henry Rifle
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10-30-2006 06:06 PM #8
If it moves to the left, crank more pressure on the left tire to make it dig a little harder. I can't tell you how many turns. You have to experiment. Just change one thing at a time, though.Jack
Gone to Texas
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10-30-2006 10:28 PM #9
excellent advice above plus you may want to run a stiffer shock on the left (or a softer one on the right) depending how severe your pull...
what do you have for diff... posi, locker?
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10-31-2006 05:26 AM #10
Great advice. If the wheelbase is correct side to side, my first move would be stiffening the left shock, if you have adjustable valving on the coilovers, stiffen the left one click. I've had to go so far as to change springs, but this was only on a car that made hard moves to the right.... Make you changes small, and keep track of what they do as Pro suggested...Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, Live for Today!
Carroll Shelby
Learning must be difficult for those who already know it all!!!!
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10-31-2006 08:09 AM #11
Originally Posted by skids72Last edited by kluxman49; 10-31-2006 at 08:13 AM.
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10-31-2006 09:39 AM #12
Same advice applies just to the other side. Make one change at a time between runs so you know what is helping and what isn't. Document each change and what it's affect was. A detailed log will be valuable information."PLAN" your life like you will live to 120.
"LIVE" your life like you could die tomorrow.
John 3:16
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10-31-2006 10:03 AM #13
Try something real simple, swap the rear tires from side to side.Mike Casella
www.1960Belair.com
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10-31-2006 03:42 PM #14
He's got coil overs. He can preload the right side by cranking the adjustment ring on the shock body. Swapping tires before trying any of that may be a good idea also. If it still pulls right after swapping the tires, you'll know it isn't the tires.
Also, make sure you have equal pressure in both tires to start with. To get equal pressures, you need a very good tire gauge with the proper pressure range. A gauge that reads 0 - 60 psi won't measure very well down at the 5- 10 psi you're going to put in your slicks. They make crossover hoses that connect to both tires, so the pressures have to end up equal.Jack
Gone to Texas
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10-31-2006 04:00 PM #15
i would agree check the tires 1st i fooled around with a set of old tires on my bucket when i 1st got it going and it would pull to the one side, found same series tire different brand different size.
Welcome to CHR. I think that you need to hook up your vacuum advance. At part throttle when cruising you have less air and fuel in each cylinder, and the air-fuel mixture is not as densely packed...
MSD 8360 distributor vacuum advance