When I built my CMC on a 1969 IRS donor pan, I decided against replacing all of those spiffy, rubber bushings holding the rear suspension together. True, I had absolutely no idea how many miles were on the donor car and, also true, I had replaced absolutely everything else on the car that could possibly wear out.
But the rear suspension felt tight (at least to me) and since all of the repair manuals tell you to "remove the rear control arms and take them to a VW Service Center for replacement of the pivot bushings" and inferred that the VW place had some sort of magical, super-secret tool to replace them with, so I guess that scared me off. After all, I had never replaced any VW control arm bushings, and had only once replaced any spring plate bushings - they didn't seem to wear out...
But that was then and this is now, right? I decided at long last that I would replace all those nasty, worn out, rubber bushings with nice, new, feel-good ones. The trouble is, it's getting almost impossible to find German OEM replacements for them, and there seems to be a raging debate on the various forums about rubber versus Urethane for these.
After reading a LOT about this, I decided to stick with rubber bushings for the spring plates (for a less harsh ride) and Urethane for the control arms since I simply couldn't find any rubber replacements and also the Massachusetts Guru of all things early VW (no, not TC....another Guru) told me that Urethane on the control arms is the only way to go. Good enough for me....
So, here I am... Got the control arms out and dropped off at a local auto machine shop that I trust to press out the pivot bushings (it wasn't a big deal after all, just another suspension bushing) and, while I'm waiting overnight for them to be done I decide to replace the spring plate bushings.
I got the real, OEM Rubber ones for there - one for each side of the spring plate. Not a big deal, really, just remove the spring plate/torsion bar cover, pop the plate off the stop to let it hang, slide it off the torsion bar and...
........HEY!.........
............WAIT A MINUTE!!.........
It can't come all the way off the torsion bar! The car body is in the way with no way to get around it!
THAT is why real, steel Speedsters, Intermeccanicas and Becks (maybe VS, too - I never checked) have those little round covers in the body just in front of the rear wheels! So you can get the friggin' Torsion bar covers off!!
So here I am.......brandy-new spring plate bushings and I can't get the stupiid cover off to get to replace the inner ones.
Once more, if I had those CMC guys here I'd give them a swift kick in the a$$. Better yet, maybe a little more forward......
So, for you more technically oriented than me, the inner bushing fits into a cup at the end of the torsion tube and rubs against a boss on the inside of the spring plate. It also has four tabs molded in which all fit into recesses in the circumference of that cup so that the bushing doesn't move around as the bar turns, it's just there to keep the torsion bar centered and absorb road vibration.
I'm really tempted to whip out my wicked sharp blade and make a cut on one side to allow me to open it up (like a horse shoe), slip it around the torsion bar and then press it into place in the cup, but I'm wondering if any of you have any good ideas that might help. One thing I thought of is that it may make a difference exactly where that cut is made, although I'm not sure of this.
I'm pretty open to new thoughts here, but this may be one of those problems to just walk away from for a day or two, have an epiphany and then try again.
Any ideas, folks??
Of course, while I'm pondering this, I can watch more of the Olympics, right? GO US WOMEN'S SOCCER!!!!!
Thanks in advance......Gordon
The Pondering Speedstah Guy
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