What exactly do they do being so thin? Stop the spring from making a grating sound?
The ones on my 67 were worn through, so I just ran a section of hose onto the top loop.
I presume they just stop any squeaks of metal of the spring on metal of the chassis. The ones on the chassis I put under the 454 Parisienne were shot, and I found an NOS pair.
To install, I just taped them on top of the spring, put a piece of tape on the side of the spring that needs to face out, and lifted the lower control arms.
What exactly do they do being so thin? Stop the spring from making a grating sound?
The ones on my 67 were worn through, so I just ran a section of hose onto the top loop.
I presume they just stop any squeaks of metal of the spring on metal of the chassis. The ones on the chassis I put under the 454 Parisienne were shot, and I found an NOS pair.
To install, I just taped them on top of the spring, put a piece of tape on the side of the spring that needs to face out, and lifted the lower control arms.
Hey Clint,
I would be very interested if you want to put those spacers to a very good cause.
The Ontario ones I spoke about, are too weathered to use.
Seeing that M20 sure brings back good memories for me Randy. It was one of the most satisfying mechanical things I've even done. So interesting to get into, and to learn all I could about them.
To any '69 Pontiac fans, this is the length to which you have to go to save one of these babies unless you are blessed by a rare solid car. Few have the wallet, the talent, the space, the lucky connections, the tolerant spouse. You have to have a vision to drive the project forward. And a nice Endura nose in your stash. Or maybe you just want to get in and drive it!
This project makes me wonder about where and in what condition that gold '69 2+2 427 4-speed from years ago is? Remember from southern Ontario, Selkirk near the shores of Lake Erie IIRC? Barnacled, speckled but untouched since '76. Rust never sleeps.