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07-22-2005 09:01 PM #1
what struts for a rail car streetrod?
i have just bought a 1933 american austin. it is a tiny car that a hot rod shop had started rodding. the front is only about 28" wide at the chassis. the car has a tubular chassis with a roll cage in it. the front is tubular and it was made supposedly for a Strange Engineering strut system, however strange tells me that their aluminum struts will not hold up on the street.
does anyone know of a strut/spindle/brake setup that can be welded to fit a tube frame?
morrison has one but it costs $2100 and i was hoping to get by a little cheaper.
any ideas on struts or even on any kind of system.
i could e mail pics
thanks
kevin
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07-22-2005 09:33 PM #2
I guess it all depends on what you want as a final product. You could go with a straight axle kit from Speedway Motors and have the gasser look to it. Lots of eyeball, but a little iffy in the turns at speed. You could graft a MII crossmember in and buy some of the nice tubular upper and lower arms if you wanted good handling, r&p steering and 11" brakes for the street. One of the members on here said at on time he grafted a Fiero front end onto a street rod, so you may want to look at one of those before you decide what to do. Grab a copy of Street Rodder from the newstand and look through the suppliers.PLANET EARTH, INSANE ASYLUM FOR THE UNIVERSE.
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07-22-2005 09:38 PM #3
thanks for the comments. i wish i could post a picture so you could see what it looks like.(tell me how if possible).
a mustang II front end just wouldnt look right although the tubular arms may work. i have really looked throught street rodder and have build a car with a mustang II before.
maybe i could just use tubular arms without the mustang II front end. chris alston has some that may work.
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07-22-2005 09:41 PM #4
The geometry is all built into the crossmember. That's what makes it work so well on most any car.PLANET EARTH, INSANE ASYLUM FOR THE UNIVERSE.
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John Norton aka johnboy