Ok so ball joints are in, bushings are mostly in, and coilovers are fitted. I then did a test fitment. I am waiting to program a machine and run my bigger brake kit adapter.







I use a dryer at my regulator, but I have never seen a drop. I am also on shop air with a massive dryer to protect some massively awesome high speed machining centers. Darn those high tolerances tools of metal destruction with there pesky hatred towards condensation.azygoustoyou wrote:Looks good Josh!
I have a question for you. I got a powder coating gun from Eastwood. I found an oven. Now all I need to do is make sure I have it hooked up right. Are you using anything inline from the compressor to dry or filter the air before it gets to the gun? Are you using a flexible line straight from the comp.? I have a 33 gal comp. and it seems to have a lot of moisture. I don't want to find out I should have done something after I already did it. Thx
No your right the Billy is way longer than that KYB, because for some reason when taking the pictures I grabbed the front KYBDaniel wrote:Hey Josh
Your doing a great job and nice photos as well ! i noticed that the Bilsten Shock was longer then the KYB
is that just me or was it the camera angle ?
I was wondering how you come up with this mod since its for a mustang 2 ?
Looking forward to seeing the finished product good luck !
Daniel
Lets say I wasn't replacing every ball joint, bushing, and steering component. Lets say I was simply removing the lower control arm, modifying the mount to be stronger, and obviously mounting the shocks.azygoustoyou wrote:Hey Josh,
How much do you think the whole mod is going to cost? What functions is the mod going to do for you?
manoa matt wrote:Lets talk more about that big brake kit.
I'm trying to develop something similar. I too did not like the cost of the Whoa kit and still having stock rotors. I can get the Wilwood calipers and make the mounting brackets and save about $250 vs buying the kit.
There are some members on Mirafiori.com that are developing a kit that uses the Fiat Uno Turbo discs which are 240mm diameter, 20mm thick vented discs, 46mm tall and have the 4 x 98 bolt spacing. You can find the rotors in drilled and sloted versions, the only problem is there are only a few places to get them, all in England and by the time they are shipped its about $80 per rotor. Their kit also uses Fiat Uno Turbo calipers. The calipers are of the sliding pin design and have the same piston diameter as the stock Fiat calipers and use the same rebuild kit. Here is a link to the kit: http://www.performancefiat.com/catalog/ ... cts_id=253
The Uno Turbo caliper has the same clamping force as the stock Fiat caliper, so the extra stoping power comes from the larger diameter rotor. I can also get some Wilwood 4 piston calipers that will fit the Uno turbo 20mm thick rotor, but I wonder if that would be too much brake effect for the front vs the rear.
After checking some shop drawings I found that those Honda Civic rotors are almost the same dimensions as the Uno Turbo rotors. You can get them in 240mm diameter with 21mm thick discs, or 242mm diameter with 19mm thick discs. The hub hole and the rotor height are pretty close too. The Honda rotors are also a 4 bolt pattern, but I could not confirm that it is a 4 x 100 spacing. I'm guessing I would grind the bolt holes out 1mm. Considering the loose tolerances with the stock Fiat rotors I don't think the modification will be an issue. The best part about the Honda rotors is the local auto parts store have them in stock and they are about $20 each.
I guess if the Honda rotors will work I don't mind the extra money for the Wilwood 4 piston calipers, but wonder if it will be overkill. I like the idea of using a more stock caliper for the maintenance and cost considering the Wilwood pads are $50 a set. I have not looked yet, but I figure there is a wide selection of pads for the Honda calipers, and relatively cheap too.
I'm pretty sure I can get the 240mm rotors and the calipers to fit in a 13 inch rim. This will be for a mildly modified street/daily driver car.
Any thoughts?
This is exactly my reason for making control arms. As it is I am going to have to extend the ball joint to reduce bump steer. Mono ball is a great idea.engineerted wrote:Josh, I had some discussions with Jason Miller about custom control arms some time back. http://www.millersmule.com
One thing I would like to do is replace the lower ball joint with an extended length mono ball, thus moving the spindle up and keeping the lower control arm parallel to the ground for those of us that like the lowered car look, or in this case the race car.
Ted
manoa matt wrote:I see you machined out the center hole and re-drilled the lug holes. How much machining of the center hole was necessary? The Honda rotor has a center hole of 61mm while the stock Fiat rotor has a center hole of 61.5mm - 62.23mm acording to drawings by Brembo and Jason Miller. I know the stock Fiat rotor center hole is loose when installed on the hub.
Lots of ricers out here and I should be able to pick up some used Honda calipers and rotors pretty cheap.