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Ridetech C10 Delrin Bushings
Curious if anybody on here has used the RideTech 'Delrin' a-arm bushings?
Any comments you might care to share? |
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If handling, and that firm ride is what your after they do fit the bill. Not any more noticeable then polyurethane to me. Personally I prefer PST's polygraphite. The price is better, and I didn't notice any handling benefits. Believe me I drove them like they were stolen. If your going to track the truck then there maybe a benefit I never noticed them on the street. |
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I am not a bushing expert, but your only supposed to tighten any bushing when it is loaded on the ground.
Bushing material is up to you in the concept of your truck, and what you want. Standard rubber is a good bushing material, and should not be discounted. As the best comes down to end goals. |
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Do that. Then, lift/put the vehicle on jack stands, disassemble it enough to allow movement through the arc of travel allowed, & see how much you can move the arms. My logic is if the suspension arms have to fight the bushings just to move, how much is the spring & shock functionality negated and or impacted vs. a set-up that allows things to actually pivot w/o bind? Wrap duct tape tightly around a hinge that can easily pivot 90° & then try to move/pivot the hinge ends. You have not changed anything w/the hinge but it no longer pivots as it should. |
Re: Ridetech C10 Delrin Bushings
Do the ride tech Delrin bushings work with stock upper/lower control arms for 67-72 as the steel bushings thread in. Are these designed to work with 73 and up control arms? Looking at the pictures the Delrin bushing sleeves look smooth versus being threaded. I made the mistake of torquing my upper/lower control arms to spec with the frame lifted versus loaded and experienced binding when attempting to put my upper bump stops in. I now have to loosen the control arm shaft bushing caps, lower and then torque. I also don’t have any weight on it, it’s just a roller at this point. When I use my body weight 200 lbs. the front end doesn’t compress much, it’s pretty stiff. I think this is due to torquing my control arm shafts with the front end off the ground.
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http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...light=ridetech I have very early versions of Ridetech tubular a-arms (1st batch). They utilized the press-fit 73-87 style bushings. The Delrin pieces look like replacements for them. I've never really looked @ the earlier threaded bushing/63-72 arms to confirm what it would take to install the RT/Delrin set-up. |
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