Gunfighter97
Member
Heyo, figured I might as well solve this as a seperate issue to my main build thread, I have a 1965 1100 PU 4x4 with newer 1200 or 1210 axles. Front axle is in question here, as the title goes: level of simulated drunkenness (
) is directly related to speed (
) times bumpyness of a given road (
) written this way:
=
× 
Basically country roads take me home has a grave meaning over 35mph, highways are perfectly fine up to 65-70. Obviously I want simulated drunkenness to equal 0 regardless of speed or pavement evenness. I did not install this axle, nor do I know for sure what model vehicle it came out of. I think its a FA-25. (Dana 44, large open knuck, drums, 8 lug, 6 bolt warn locking hubs, low pinion) I've never done much with altering alignment of axles (because I don't know how) but I have a 10 pound service manual (62-71 Pickall) and am feeling adventurous after eating some chocolate cake. What I know it needs: tie rod ends and basically every joint between the power box(same origin as axles) and the controll arm, new front shocks, rear shocks at all would probably help, also the horizontal shock common to alot of power steer axles is absent. I just stripped an axle at IHPA for a tie rod guard(my axle had the mounts for one) it had the shock so I have that with mounts but the shock itself I doubt is useable other than for dimentions collapsed/expanded unless the open knuck steers farther/lesser than the closed knuck I got it from. Also forgive my likely bad terminology, caster? camber? one o' those, where the steering axis of the knuckle is leaned back toward the cab may or may not be leaned the wrong way. I noticed a pair of shims welded (very poorly welded btw) in place in front thus canting it foreward? Anyways see pics, let me know how to measure what needs be measured, and let me know any thoughts on it. Also I will post any pics needed to diagnose the problem, havent had it apart as of yet specifically for this. Thanks in advance.






Basically country roads take me home has a grave meaning over 35mph, highways are perfectly fine up to 65-70. Obviously I want simulated drunkenness to equal 0 regardless of speed or pavement evenness. I did not install this axle, nor do I know for sure what model vehicle it came out of. I think its a FA-25. (Dana 44, large open knuck, drums, 8 lug, 6 bolt warn locking hubs, low pinion) I've never done much with altering alignment of axles (because I don't know how) but I have a 10 pound service manual (62-71 Pickall) and am feeling adventurous after eating some chocolate cake. What I know it needs: tie rod ends and basically every joint between the power box(same origin as axles) and the controll arm, new front shocks, rear shocks at all would probably help, also the horizontal shock common to alot of power steer axles is absent. I just stripped an axle at IHPA for a tie rod guard(my axle had the mounts for one) it had the shock so I have that with mounts but the shock itself I doubt is useable other than for dimentions collapsed/expanded unless the open knuck steers farther/lesser than the closed knuck I got it from. Also forgive my likely bad terminology, caster? camber? one o' those, where the steering axis of the knuckle is leaned back toward the cab may or may not be leaned the wrong way. I noticed a pair of shims welded (very poorly welded btw) in place in front thus canting it foreward? Anyways see pics, let me know how to measure what needs be measured, and let me know any thoughts on it. Also I will post any pics needed to diagnose the problem, havent had it apart as of yet specifically for this. Thanks in advance.