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Is it leaf spring or trailing arm?I'm ready to lower my 70 C10 as well!
I’m tossing around upgrading to that front kit on my Burb. Was the install pretty straightforward?after a few cheap drop kit i made the big move: QA1 front kit and TCI rear yes it cost more but at the end i just want to love my ride..and man i love it!
Good points. No matter what flip kit is used (or other options like you suggested) I was curious as to why no one ever at least tack welds the perches on instead of just relying on clamping pressure.My random notes...
Most drop spindles are very similar but there are some differences.
CPP modular use a drum offset to allow the wheel to turn in and not rub. They also allow for bigger brakes to be bolted on w/out cutting the spindle. Not sure either is applicable in this situation with the 15" wheel requirement.
Wilwood and CPP both make spindles that use bolt in hubs if going big wheel and brake combinations.
I like to flip the axle but don't like flip kits. Buy some Mopar perches from Summit and do it right and weld on. $20 and some welding. Nothing to loosen.
C-Notch only required when flipping if carrying a load.
Weld on new shock brackets and try and avoid the extenders.
If you are going to C-notch, look for the ones that fully encapsulate the frame so no strength is lost.
That thing is gorgeous! I'd love a full QA1 setup, but I gotta spread the butter I have over the whole slice of bread- funds are limited. It's a long term project, so a high end setup will definitely come along later down the road.after a few cheap drop kit i made the big move: QA1 front kit and TCI rear yes it cost more but at the end i just want to love my ride..and man i love it!
That's really cool. Like the Chevelle on the trailer as well. I grew up driving around in a root beer brown '74.We did about a dozen trucks back in the day (a '69, a couple '75's, '77, a couple '80's, '82, and a couple '87's off the top of my head) with cut coils in the front and relocated the spring hangars on the frame in the rear.
Total cost at the time was about $1.98 for grade 8 bolts/nuts/washers, plus a front end alignment.
The red truck was a daily driver for 30 years and 200k miles, including trailering and light hauling, in Michigan, Arizona and Montana, with no issues.
(It's still on the road, just doing parade duty and car shows and leisure activities).
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An actual member of the band WAR just told me my low-rider truck is cool.
easy thing to do!I’m tossing around upgrading to that front kit on my Burb. Was the install pretty straightforward?
Thanks for all the info. Just got it home Sunday and there's a lot of loose ends that the seller didn't get to before sending it my way, since I bought it in the middle of him doing an engine swap. So I've been hammering away at just working toward getting it roadworthy. The other stuff will have to wait for now. No worries, it's the rainy season here anyway. The credit card was smoking this morning from all the stuff I've ordered.Some days I wonder how I ended up driving a 73 C10 low-rider. It can be a PITA. I mean, yeah, I have a real truck bed unlike the rolling cribs with a 5' cargo capacity... but I can't drive passengers if we have a job on site cuz she's a deathtap, CA has declared war on gasoline, etc.she's hard to park...
Then I remember that three years I did a job, and a member of the '70's band WAR was there. He saw my truck in the lot on the way out, came over, we talked about Whittier Blvd and how the dude I bought it from was an old-school East-LA low rider dude, straight outta like an Edward James Olmos movie, he pointed out the random pink pinstripes in a couple places and said it was a Thing, like the Yosemite Sam on the fuel door, so what's your favorite Los Lobos song (Kiko), for ten mins. Cool guy.
It wasn't until the end of the day that it really hit me: