Please read.. There's a reward at the end. 
quick background: I started my 1975 2wd Scout II project almost 10 years ago. I rescued it from the woods after sitting for 8 years. Took it completely apart & put it back together. Problem was, once finished, it drove all kinds of horrible... Like, scary horrible. I have had a few early 70's broncos & a cj7... They drove great on the street... But not this guy. Anways, I quickly ran out of funds, so there it sat. Now, I want to "finish" this project... Hopefully you guys can help. The picture is the "before & after" of when I found it & after the "resto-mod"...
Stuff done: replaced 196 4 cyl / 3 speed with a 1996 Chevy vortec v8 / 4l60e automatic combo & in-tank fuel pump. Added a 1" body lift w/ all new body bushings. Added brake booster. Replaced all spring bushings, shocks, & added power steering box w/ a borgeson steering joint.
From what all I have read (and I have spent hours & hours reading all the suspension posts) if I'm running 30-31" tires, I need caster shims & possibly a reverse shackle kit. I'm wanting a street cruiser b/c it is a 2wd, afterall.
Springy stuff: my rear springs are flat as flat can be... My fronts don't flex at all. I think I put regular monroe shocks on it. I plan to run a terra top I found instead of the full top I have & the Chevy motor setup is approx 100 lbs lighter than the 196... So the way I figure it, I'm losing approx. 100 lbs on each end from stock.
Also, my front axle is "bowed" so that it looks like a u shape. From center, it rises maybe 3/16 to 1/4 from perch to perch. I read that alignment shops used to do this to correct camber. I found & bought an almost straight one, but not sure if I need to use it... But when I roll the axle via shims, I wonder if this will throw everything off.
I looked for a long time (years ago) for stock height springs... I see that you guys offer them. Since you guys bit the bullet & had some made, I want to get all the items needed from you to get my rig running down the road properly... Last year, I moved from rural alabama to pretty much downtown atlanta, so I need my truck to be "right" to fight this diseased traffic...
So here are my questions: will your stock springs do the trick for my setup? What degree shims? Reverse shackle needed? Use the straighter axle tube I found? Are the rubber spring bushings really that much better for street use? Should I lose the 1" body lift? Any extra input?
Reward: if anyone actually read all of this & can reply, then I offer a sincere thank you & offer up an interweb handshake. That's the best I can do here... But if you were sitting next to me, I'd buy you a beer or 6.
quick background: I started my 1975 2wd Scout II project almost 10 years ago. I rescued it from the woods after sitting for 8 years. Took it completely apart & put it back together. Problem was, once finished, it drove all kinds of horrible... Like, scary horrible. I have had a few early 70's broncos & a cj7... They drove great on the street... But not this guy. Anways, I quickly ran out of funds, so there it sat. Now, I want to "finish" this project... Hopefully you guys can help. The picture is the "before & after" of when I found it & after the "resto-mod"...
Stuff done: replaced 196 4 cyl / 3 speed with a 1996 Chevy vortec v8 / 4l60e automatic combo & in-tank fuel pump. Added a 1" body lift w/ all new body bushings. Added brake booster. Replaced all spring bushings, shocks, & added power steering box w/ a borgeson steering joint.
From what all I have read (and I have spent hours & hours reading all the suspension posts) if I'm running 30-31" tires, I need caster shims & possibly a reverse shackle kit. I'm wanting a street cruiser b/c it is a 2wd, afterall.
Springy stuff: my rear springs are flat as flat can be... My fronts don't flex at all. I think I put regular monroe shocks on it. I plan to run a terra top I found instead of the full top I have & the Chevy motor setup is approx 100 lbs lighter than the 196... So the way I figure it, I'm losing approx. 100 lbs on each end from stock.
Also, my front axle is "bowed" so that it looks like a u shape. From center, it rises maybe 3/16 to 1/4 from perch to perch. I read that alignment shops used to do this to correct camber. I found & bought an almost straight one, but not sure if I need to use it... But when I roll the axle via shims, I wonder if this will throw everything off.
I looked for a long time (years ago) for stock height springs... I see that you guys offer them. Since you guys bit the bullet & had some made, I want to get all the items needed from you to get my rig running down the road properly... Last year, I moved from rural alabama to pretty much downtown atlanta, so I need my truck to be "right" to fight this diseased traffic...
So here are my questions: will your stock springs do the trick for my setup? What degree shims? Reverse shackle needed? Use the straighter axle tube I found? Are the rubber spring bushings really that much better for street use? Should I lose the 1" body lift? Any extra input?
Reward: if anyone actually read all of this & can reply, then I offer a sincere thank you & offer up an interweb handshake. That's the best I can do here... But if you were sitting next to me, I'd buy you a beer or 6.