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    Springs

    Ok I think I've look over all the stickies for this information, and don't think i could find a straigh answer, so it if exists please send me the link. Heres my question. My car is begining to sag on ones side. I want to keep the stock ride height, not lower it, or raise it in the front or back. I have the LTD-S which has the police suspension parts, and I was wondering if there were inexpensive, but good springs i could buy that would be heavier duty than the stock, (isnt the front like 500 LB springs?) but still keep the same height. Also, would a car leaning to one side, mind you it isnt really a huge lean but it is noticable. Be bad for the car in any way? Sorry for the long post, hope you guys can help me out and point me in the right direction. Thanks in advanced
    -Phil

    sigpic

    +1982 Ford LTD-S Police Car. Built 351w, Trickflow 11R 190 Heads, Holley Sniper EFI, RPM Intake+ Hyperspark dizzy, WR-AOD, Full exhaust headers to tails. 3.27 Trac-Lok Rear. Aluminum Police Driveshaft. Speedway Springs+Bilstein Shocks, Intermediate Brakes, HPP Steering Box.

    +2003 Acura CL Type S 6-speed

    #2
    It's possible that it is not the springs. Measure the frame hieght in the same spots on both sides. The bodymounts go bad on these cars adn can lead to issues.

    Any of the springs other than stock or stock HD replacements will raise or lower the car. Newer PI springs are longer, and you could just cut them to get back to your ride hieght.
    Builder/Owner of Badass Panther Wagons

    Busy maintaining a fleet of Fords

    Comment


      #3
      Ok ive decided to go with stock HD, It is definitly leaning to the passenger side, i havnt measured it yet but i would say by one or two inches, do bodymounts fail due to rust? Or something else? There is almost no rust on the frame or body. I have no looked at the body mounts very well at all though.

      Also i heard cutting springs can result in adverse affects aka bad handling and what not.

      I looked at rockauto, and they say what different cars the springs are for, and the front say they are heavy duty, but i cant find the lbs/in specs anywhere for t he springs....
      -Phil

      sigpic

      +1982 Ford LTD-S Police Car. Built 351w, Trickflow 11R 190 Heads, Holley Sniper EFI, RPM Intake+ Hyperspark dizzy, WR-AOD, Full exhaust headers to tails. 3.27 Trac-Lok Rear. Aluminum Police Driveshaft. Speedway Springs+Bilstein Shocks, Intermediate Brakes, HPP Steering Box.

      +2003 Acura CL Type S 6-speed

      Comment


        #4
        Ok ive decided to go with stock HD, It is definitly leaning to the passenger side, i havnt measured it yet but i would say by one or two inches, do bodymounts fail due to rust? Or something else? There is almost no rust on the frame or body. I have no looked at the body mounts very well at all though.

        Also i heard cutting springs can result in adverse affects aka bad handling and what not.

        I looked at rockauto, and they say what different cars the springs are for, and the front say they are heavy duty, but i cant find the lbs/in specs anywhere for the springs....
        -Phil

        sigpic

        +1982 Ford LTD-S Police Car. Built 351w, Trickflow 11R 190 Heads, Holley Sniper EFI, RPM Intake+ Hyperspark dizzy, WR-AOD, Full exhaust headers to tails. 3.27 Trac-Lok Rear. Aluminum Police Driveshaft. Speedway Springs+Bilstein Shocks, Intermediate Brakes, HPP Steering Box.

        +2003 Acura CL Type S 6-speed

        Comment


          #5
          Cutting springs does not hurt anything when it is done correctly.

          Bodymounts fail because they are rubber and rubber deteriorates over time.
          Builder/Owner of Badass Panther Wagons

          Busy maintaining a fleet of Fords

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Brown_Muscle View Post
            I looked at rockauto, and they say what different cars the springs are for, and the front say they are heavy duty, but i cant find the lbs/in specs anywhere for the springs....
            Might be best to draw your part numbers from Mike's suspension sticky. That way you'll know with reasonable certainty just what you're ordering.
            2012 Mazda5 Touring | Finally working on the LTD again!

            Comment


              #7
              if the sprigns are a generic PN, then the stuff i have listed in the stickies might help you figure out the spring rate.
              Builder/Owner of Badass Panther Wagons

              Busy maintaining a fleet of Fords

              Comment


                #8
                hmm, ok the amount of lean is not as much as i said, its under a 1/2 inch in the back, and around an 1/8 in the front or so. It is still noticable by looking at it, what should I look for with the body mounts if I take a look under the car? I'm going to check out the springs in sticky now, the lbs/in seemed a little wacky though? I'll take another look
                -Phil

                sigpic

                +1982 Ford LTD-S Police Car. Built 351w, Trickflow 11R 190 Heads, Holley Sniper EFI, RPM Intake+ Hyperspark dizzy, WR-AOD, Full exhaust headers to tails. 3.27 Trac-Lok Rear. Aluminum Police Driveshaft. Speedway Springs+Bilstein Shocks, Intermediate Brakes, HPP Steering Box.

                +2003 Acura CL Type S 6-speed

                Comment


                  #9
                  So if I understand correctly I should get this rear spring, and it will give me stock height and performance.
                  Part Number CC817

                  And this for the front?

                  Part Number 8656

                  What is the standard measurement for the springs resistence? The load in pounds, or the lbs per inch? The previous post says
                  Front Springs:

                  Base: 374lb/in
                  Wagon: 443lb/in
                  HPP: 540 lb/in
                  P71: 700 lb/in





                  Rear Springs
                  Base rear coils: 107 lb/in
                  Wagon rear coils: 182lb/in
                  P71 rear coils 160 lb/in
                  HPP bags ~110 lb/in nominal
                  which was what was confusing me, due to a different measurement.



                  And also, is there a definite way to tell weather its the springs, or the body mounts?

                  Thanks for you information and patience guys.
                  -Phil

                  sigpic

                  +1982 Ford LTD-S Police Car. Built 351w, Trickflow 11R 190 Heads, Holley Sniper EFI, RPM Intake+ Hyperspark dizzy, WR-AOD, Full exhaust headers to tails. 3.27 Trac-Lok Rear. Aluminum Police Driveshaft. Speedway Springs+Bilstein Shocks, Intermediate Brakes, HPP Steering Box.

                  +2003 Acura CL Type S 6-speed

                  Comment


                    #10
                    My car used to lean, my '88 P72 leaned, and my old man's P71 leans. They all sit low on the driver's side rear. I swapped out the springs in the rear of mine, and the problem was solved. However, somtimes the way that you park may make the lean more prevalent...
                    **2012 Ford Mustang Boss 302: 5.0/ 6 spd/ 3.73s, 20K Cruiser
                    **2006 MGM,"Ultimate": 4.6/ 2.73/ Dark Tint, Magnaflows, 19s, 115K Daily Driver
                    **2012 Harley Davidson Wide Glide (FXDWG):103/ Cobra Speedsters/ Cosmetics, 9K Poseur HD Rider
                    **1976 Ford F-150 4WD: 360, 4 spd, 3.50s, factory A/C, 4" lift, Bilsteins, US Indy Mags, 35s Truck Duties

                    Comment


                      #11
                      hmmm, I am in a flat driveway, but it was parked on the side of the road for like ten years, which has a slight grade on it, wondering if that affected the car.
                      -Phil

                      sigpic

                      +1982 Ford LTD-S Police Car. Built 351w, Trickflow 11R 190 Heads, Holley Sniper EFI, RPM Intake+ Hyperspark dizzy, WR-AOD, Full exhaust headers to tails. 3.27 Trac-Lok Rear. Aluminum Police Driveshaft. Speedway Springs+Bilstein Shocks, Intermediate Brakes, HPP Steering Box.

                      +2003 Acura CL Type S 6-speed

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Measure the body to frame spacing in different lcoations to see how bad the body mounts are. And no matter what, if it's a box panther, the mounts are bad. And since you already measured the frame to ground, measure the body to ground. That will show you where the issues are.

                        Measurement? LOL Spring rate is lb/in which means POUNDS PER INCH. Which is how many pounds it takes to compress the spring an inch.
                        Builder/Owner of Badass Panther Wagons

                        Busy maintaining a fleet of Fords

                        Comment


                          #13
                          I know this, I have no other way to express what i'm saying, in the specs for springs you gave there is no pounds per inch to compare them with, simply the load in pounds, so I have no way to tell if they are the springs I want. That is what I ment
                          -Phil

                          sigpic

                          +1982 Ford LTD-S Police Car. Built 351w, Trickflow 11R 190 Heads, Holley Sniper EFI, RPM Intake+ Hyperspark dizzy, WR-AOD, Full exhaust headers to tails. 3.27 Trac-Lok Rear. Aluminum Police Driveshaft. Speedway Springs+Bilstein Shocks, Intermediate Brakes, HPP Steering Box.

                          +2003 Acura CL Type S 6-speed

                          Comment


                            #14
                            the normal measurement is lbs/in. If they don't have that listed, you will need to find that info somewhere else.

                            If they have the generic moog PN system, which I listed, you might be able to cross reference the spring. I hate rockauto's website. It sucks big time. Partsamerica is where I got the info for the FAQ.
                            Builder/Owner of Badass Panther Wagons

                            Busy maintaining a fleet of Fords

                            Comment


                              #15
                              ahhh ok thanks i'll try there. And it appears as though my rear has a 1/4 difference, while the front is less than an 1/8, so it's possible I may just try replacing the rear springs first, it'd be a lot cheaper and a lot less work than the front any way.
                              -Phil

                              sigpic

                              +1982 Ford LTD-S Police Car. Built 351w, Trickflow 11R 190 Heads, Holley Sniper EFI, RPM Intake+ Hyperspark dizzy, WR-AOD, Full exhaust headers to tails. 3.27 Trac-Lok Rear. Aluminum Police Driveshaft. Speedway Springs+Bilstein Shocks, Intermediate Brakes, HPP Steering Box.

                              +2003 Acura CL Type S 6-speed

                              Comment

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