these ball joint spacers look well made!
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- axeman
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these ball joint spacers look well made!
http://www.syncrohospital.co.za/listDet ... ?Itemid=89" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
the burley ones looked alot thiner, these seam to have a lot more meat on them,
neil
the burley ones looked alot thiner, these seam to have a lot more meat on them,
neil
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Re: these ball joint spacers look well made!
Beefy but a bit clunky. I would much rather CNC mill them from EN8 steel and have them plated, if I wanted some. Alloy is not the material to use in such a critical location, when all the rest of the suspension is high-tensile steel IMHO.
Clive? Opinion please!
Clive? Opinion please!
1985 Oettinger 3.2 Caravelle RHD syncro twin slider. SA Microbus bumpers, duplex winch system, ARC 7X15 period alloys
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Re: these ball joint spacers look well made!
Well i have been using and very much abusing a set from Stuart "syncro hospital" for over 2 years now and they are still going strong.
Russel
Russel
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Re: these ball joint spacers look well made!
silverbullet wrote:Beefy but a bit clunky. I would much rather CNC mill them from EN8 steel and have them plated, if I wanted some. Alloy is not the material to use in such a critical location, when all the rest of the suspension is high-tensile steel IMHO.
Clive? Opinion please!
I reckon that the alloy is fine if machined accurately and the correct spec location bolts used. There is a heck of a lot of steel in my suspension and very little of it is H/T and if you look under the Range Rover that is sitting on my driveway you will see lots of alloy making up the suspension components!
syncropaddy
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Re: these ball joint spacers look well made!
SP, I used to have a late BA chassis with a 2.5 VM Turbo D. Been there, done that, saw the error of my ways!
IME, suspension parts get made from aluminium alloy for two main reasons:
1.To save unsprung weight
2.It's easier to machine than steel
So:
1.Saving weight on a T3 syncro? Drop your shorts before you go out - weight saved and driver mood improved
2.If it's easier to machine, it's easier to deform too. That's what troubles me about using alloy in this application.
I'm not dissing syncrohospital, I'd just rather have steel on my wagon.
IME, suspension parts get made from aluminium alloy for two main reasons:
1.To save unsprung weight
2.It's easier to machine than steel
So:
1.Saving weight on a T3 syncro? Drop your shorts before you go out - weight saved and driver mood improved

2.If it's easier to machine, it's easier to deform too. That's what troubles me about using alloy in this application.
I'm not dissing syncrohospital, I'd just rather have steel on my wagon.
1985 Oettinger 3.2 Caravelle RHD syncro twin slider. SA Microbus bumpers, duplex winch system, ARC 7X15 period alloys
- syncropaddy
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Re: these ball joint spacers look well made!
silverbullet wrote:SP, I used to have a late BA chassis with a 2.5 VM Turbo D. Been there, done that, saw the error of my ways!
Its a bit newer than that ......
silverbullet wrote:Saving weight on a T3 syncro? Drop your shorts before you go out - weight saved and driver mood improved![]()
Hehehehe .................

silverbullet wrote:If it's easier to machine, it's easier to deform too.
Agree but in this application ? it would also depend on the aluminium used as well. There is some lovely stuff available out there, I used to sell it years ago - along with Hitachi Seiki, Bridgeport, Harrison, Trumph, Sandvik, Iscar, Dormer and a few other bits and pieces!
syncropaddy
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Re: these ball joint spacers look well made!
Now we're talking the same language...
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Re: these ball joint spacers look well made!
You may wish to compare it with one that is not particularly well made but hopefully doing the same job!


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Re: these ball joint spacers look well made!
Russel at Syncro-Nutz wrote:Well i have been using and very much abusing a set from Stuart "syncro hospital" for over 2 years now and they are still going strong.
Russel
Is this that Stuart we camped with a couple of years back?
jed