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montefreak 09-13-2010 12:48 AM

dropping my 67
 
I have a friend who lowered his 72 with 2 1/2" springs all around..and without changing shocks....is this ok to do???? i am wanting to lower my 67 with little cost involved but i refuse to cut or alter my springs.....please let me know what you think....also...can i just change my springs in the front and use lowering blocks in the back????thank you all..:metal:

N2TRUX 09-13-2010 10:38 AM

Re: dropping my 67
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by montefreak (Post 4187263)
I have a friend who lowered his 72 with 2 1/2" springs all around..and without changing shocks....is this ok to do???? i am wanting to lower my 67 with little cost involved but i refuse to cut or alter my springs.....please let me know what you think....also...can i just change my springs in the front and use lowering blocks in the back????

You are contradicting yourself here. You say you want to do it cheap, but don't want to cut your front springs. If it were me, I would cut the front coils and use that money saved for new shocks. You might get by with out them, but I would change the shocks anyway.

The best method is new springs and new shocks. If you can't afford that, there is no reason why you can't cut the front coil until you can afoord to do it right. Cut is fine, heating is bad.

SCOTI 09-13-2010 11:52 AM

Re: dropping my 67
 
^^ Cutting in moderation is fine. One coil yeilds 2-3" of drop; don't go beyond that amount.

brans72 09-13-2010 08:15 PM

Re: dropping my 67
 
What about a 67 using Jeep spring in the back with new shocks is that possible on a tight budget?

SCOTI 09-14-2010 12:09 AM

Re: dropping my 67
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by brans72 (Post 4188600)
What about a 67 using Jeep spring in the back with new shocks is that possible on a tight budget?

Define tight budget? Depending on how the drop is done, OE replacement shocks are more than acceptable & should fit within a 'tight' budget.

brans72 09-14-2010 07:03 AM

Re: dropping my 67
 
I wanna cut front spring and put TJ Jeep springs in rear with KYB springs possible without new panhard bar in rear and safe to drive?

SCOTI 09-14-2010 10:15 AM

Re: dropping my 67
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by brans72 (Post 4189406)
I wanna cut front spring and put TJ Jeep springs in rear with KYB springs possible without new panhard bar in rear and safe to drive?

1-coil off the front, Jeep springs in the back & KYB GR-2's would be a decent combo.

brans72 09-14-2010 07:11 PM

Re: dropping my 67
 
ok sounds very do able! What about the bar in the rear can I do without till I can get a nice kit from ECE or can get the correct adjustable bar? Thanks for info Scoti

SCOTI 09-14-2010 11:32 PM

Re: dropping my 67
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by brans72 (Post 4190317)
ok sounds very do able! What about the bar in the rear can I do without till I can get a nice kit from ECE or can get the correct adjustable bar? Thanks for info Scoti

I've seen them heated & then 'bent' to re-center the rear. On my 67 (back in the day), we cut one end of the Panhard bar & shortened it to the required length. I've learned alot since then & wouldn't shorten one regardless of budget. I would just do a budget long Panhard bar & make my own mounts & such.

brans72 09-15-2010 09:19 AM

Re: dropping my 67
 
I would just do a budget long Panhard bar & make my own mounts & such. Can you give some more details here please?

SCOTI 09-15-2010 11:02 AM

Re: dropping my 67
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by brans72 (Post 4192512)
I would just do a budget long Panhard bar & make my own mounts & such. Can you give some more details here please?

Make your own mount that attaches to the pass side truck arm & stretch the OE bar to length. Make your own long/super track bar by taking two short/OE bars & making one long bar. Cut off one end of each OE bar & then thread the ends of the bar the same size as a tie-rod sleeve. Thread the ends into a tie-rod sleeve & it can be adjusted just like a tie-rod is adjusted.

You can also just stretch the OE bar but you need to make sure the length is right before welding it up.


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