Ball joint front end
If you go to dune-buggy.com buggy talk and do a search for "soften front end" in the "search" and in "search archives" you will find a lot of info. Your arms need to attach to a full stack of torsion leaves so you need to replace solid leaves with split leaves or cut some of the solid leaves and leave the pieces at the ends.
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Dave, Whatever you do, don't weld on the torsion leaves at all. Rob and I recently rebuilt the front end of a sand rail that had sections tack welded in place, and several of them were broken! The heat from the welding must have weakened the leaves considerably. I think Bruce recommends epoxy to hold the sections in place. I personally went with the "replace some solid leaves with split sets" method myself. Works great!
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I think it will. I also have no welding skills so I see this as a good option to try before I turn to a pro. There is no weight on the Towd's front end. No gas tank....nothing. I am not entirely sure that is the whole problem though, something could be binding or unlubricated. It has been like this for a while though with the previous owner. I should take a picture of the 2 15" cast iron weights they had welded to the front beam?
Did it sit for a long period of time before you got it? Also did the suspension work with the added weight? It is possible for the shocks to sieze well enough to hold spring tension if exposed to the weather too long . You should be able to move the front end up and down a couple inches (or more)with one hand on the front bumper.
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- 5150bossman
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When I purchased our F/G buggy, the front end was stiff as a rock. I could put all my weight on it and it would barely budge. I lubed the heck out of the beam and took it on a run. By the time the weekend was over, it was like a whole different beam. I could now put my weight on it and almost push it down 4"! Best I could tell, no one had lubed the front end since the thing was first built back in '78!
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- 5150bossman
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"I'll just have to clean out all the grease that I just shot in there, but it is worth a try." ? I just shot grease in all the beam zerk fittings (4) until it started to push out each end of the beam at the joints. Nothing special. Maybe you should just keep it together until you get it running. Then you could take it for a test run then lube it again before checking if it moves any better. If not, then you could pull it apart. :2cents:
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Hi Dave, I'm looking to do the opposite on my Towd. It has a piece of allthread for lack of a better description, in the lower tube. My suspension is very nice and soft, but too soft for the trails and roads I run on. If this isn't needed for a week or two, I'll try to get some pics of the setup. It would be awesome for the street, but I need more clearance! Found a pic! It must have square ends for the arms. If you want it I'll send it to you when I pull it.