View Full Version : The Build...part 2


riporter
2004-12-19, 16:29
Okay...I got the car finally..ended up payin 1100 for it...yes its rough...what rust there is is surface and the body is perfectly straight without so much as a ding in it. A set of centerlines came with the car..here's some pics. The first one is how it's been sittin for the last 10 years.

riporter
2004-12-19, 16:32
Here are some more...we are gonna strip the peripherals this week and send it to have it media blasted and primed.

CornedBeef4.6L
2004-12-19, 16:59
I know you will restore it to its former glory. $1100.00 is a fair deal. I am assuming you mean to finish it as a track only car:thumbsup: :bouncy:

71gold
2004-12-19, 17:18
rick,
not much of a"drag only car" person. would like to know about the ...arm rest location :huh: ...frank...

riporter
2004-12-19, 17:56
Frank my guess would be it was moved there because it conflicted with the roll cage...door latch is up there with it.

Dan Starnes
2004-12-19, 19:05
Looks like a solid car. Car will now have proper home!
Dan

littleredtoy
2004-12-19, 21:24
You really are getting into this drag racing, huh?

Any history on the car? Was it a long time racer
or is this an unfinished project?
If I missed part of the story on a previous post
I apologize.

Seth

PINKY
2004-12-19, 23:32
looks like a good start!
Rick Racer!!!!!!
its kinda like golf (which I played for years)...once you try it...your either bitten by the bug or ........

REDMAVERICK
2004-12-20, 01:15
My armrest was "relocated" to the same spot.Both of them.
The white line on the dash and the double white lines onthe wheel are to be sure the wheels are straight.
FYI -I did not build this car.I bought it from a gentleman from Tucson AZ.
All props to him..he did all the fab and planning on this car. I got this car for 5K.
Turnkey. I had enough of trying to get my 302 Stang into the 10s 1/8th.Put some feelers out for a big block small car -Pinto-Maverick-Mustang-.He contacted me and we put the deal together.
Once again props to him Al Sciutto, Thanks
Some one here or FORDMUSCLE probably knows him.
Back to the build,HELL YEAH That is a perfect start for your build.I dont think your going to have to make a lot of changes (I dont say mods).
Good Luck
If I can help in any way just ask.

REDMAVERICK
It took me 2 hrs to type this -DRUNK\34VJ34P

PINKY
2004-12-20, 21:58
one thing I just noticed, and Rick I am sure you have too. You will have to do something with the roll bar running across the drivers door. Bend it, make it a swing out bar or something....cause you and I are around the size "smallness":hmmm: and I ain't seeing my a$$ crawling in there:biglaugh:

Hawkco
2004-12-21, 11:44
one thing I just noticed, and Rick I am sure you have too. You will have to do something with the roll bar running across the drivers door. Bend it, make it a swing out bar or something....cause you and I are around the size "smallness":hmmm: and I ain't seeing my a$$ crawling in there:biglaugh:
Yeah, Rick, good point. If you put a bend in the bar by the door, it will make it easier for me to get my tiny hiney in the car, when I go for a test drive at the FFW mini-meet.:bouncy:

riporter
2004-12-21, 14:56
Modifications on that bar are definitely in order unless I lose a hundred or so lbs.
Terry the car wont be ready for this years FFW...it's gonna be a slow process.
I'm trying to decide on keeping the existing rear suspension setup and just freshen it up or go with a completely new frame rail kit with 4 link and coil overs. I've been told the 4 link would be better for the kind of HP I want to run.
Nothing will be done until after the holidays now anyway...got some time to think on it.
Seth the car came out of the Columbia area where it ran during the 80's
in the early 90's it ran local and some of the old timers know the car and remember it being a formidable opponent. The car is extremely light the way it sits right now..we didn't have it centered on the trailer once we got it on..me and my son just pushed it over rather effortlessly.
The more I look into building the 460 the more a high compression 408 is looking better and better.

Hawkco
2004-12-21, 19:07
Rick, look on the bright side about our builds and drag cars. Our cars get to weigh less because the driver adds sufficient ballast.:biglaugh:

riporter
2004-12-26, 20:16
4 link vs. ladder bar? which is better? if I keep the ladder bars I'm gonna put a set of axle housing adapters on. They wrap around the axle housing and attach to the ladder bars for added strength.

Hawkco
2004-12-26, 22:14
Rick, I haven't done either. However, in my research - reading, talking to folks who have, asking questins at the drag strip, and communicating the chassis guys - I came to the conclusion that 4-link is the better way. You have more control on the set-up, etc. But, I also came to the conclusion that ladder bars are cheaper and require less modifications and will work fairly well for a lot racing applications. The most important conclusion I came to about rear suspensions for drag racing, is that it is mostly opinion. It absolutely depends on who you are talking to. With that said, I defer to the opinions to be posted later.

PINKY
2004-12-26, 23:06
I am sure others will disagree, but myself and Ron Muir (Green Machine) checked into this last year when working on his car...and the only major difference between the 2 is "adjustability". You have a lot more "tweeks" with the 4 link. IMO, the 4 link is overkill on anything under 1,000 horsepower. If you are looking for every advantage and are willing to due a multiple amount of T&T, then the 4 link will be beneficial. But if you are not going to crawl under it after a pass or 2, tweek, record data on track conditions, temperature, etc. etc. and tweek and trial and error and blah blah blah then the ladder bar is a much simpler design and requires less tuning. I know of a lot of high horsepower cars running ladder bars...and I know a lot of high hosrepower cars running 4 link. But again.....like Terry said, its "opinion"

riporter
2004-12-27, 07:48
Thx guys...I think I'm gonna stay with the ladder bars.. I heard the same thing about adjusting the 4 link and it's tendency to be a pain. I know it doesn't look like it but the suspension under it now is pretty stout.
Once those leafs come out it will give me 19" from the fenderwell lip to the frame rail.
I can get some pretty good "meat" under their with the correct backspacing.
The shock perches will need about 2" added to them in order to use coil overs.
I'm still trying to decide on whether to use a panhard bar, diagonal link or wishbone axle system to take the lateral movement out thats gonna be there after the leafs come out...what do yall think?

Andysutt
2004-12-27, 11:22
Very good start on a car. Wish mine already had been tubbed and such :(

mavman
2004-12-27, 16:13
With ladder bars, a diagonal link will work fine, and is the cheapest route. Ladder bars don't let the car roll rotate (side-to-side rotation on the axle housing) so the wishbone is basically a waste. Wishbones are excellent for street/strip 4 link cars as they'll let the car roll rotate...which gives a better ride and can improve the launch. Also, the wishbone MUST ALWAYS be lubricated so the slider will work...otherwise it'll squeak, bind, and eventually fail. Panhard bars are on a ton of cars, but I personally don't care for them if they have to be short, as in the case of most backhalf drag cars. When the panhard bar is short (as in most backhalf cars) it will pull the rear end to one side or the other as the rear end moves up or down....and yes you can feel it in the driver's seat. Almost feels like the car is loose.

BTW, I vote for the 4-link...but your mind is already made up. They both cost the same, but the 4 link will generally give you more floor space inside the car and again more adjustability. The downside to a ladder bar is that it MUST be absolutely perfect upon installation, otherwise you'll have an ill-handling race car. You can be off a hair with a 4-link and you can compensate for it easily.

On mine, I was dreading the test & tune part. It was simple. I plotted the holes and intersect points (instant centers and anti-squat) and got in touch with a guy about where to start with it. Got it where he thought would be real close and moved the IC in 2 directions, eventually went back to where it was to begin with. It will hook on gravel, red light on a pro tree and it basically drives itself. Very smooth running car. I can tune it to do monster wheelstands or to be very tame and launch flat & straight. Ladders hit the tires harder, which if you've got enough power & SLR, may make keeping the front end on the ground a bit of a challenge.....not that that's a bad thing, of course:D

One other thing to consider....the front rod ends on ladder bars had better be the highest-quality ends you can find. Remember there are only 2 of them to transfer the power/torque to the chassis....and if one of them breaks (and they tend to do so) it will be a handful. They are stressed in 2 directions at once...upward and forward, which will bend the cheaper versions, and eventually they'll break. With the 4 link, 2 upper ones are being pulled, the 2 lower ones are being pushed. There's more area there to distribute the load since there's 4 of them (front side only) instead of just 2:tup:

riporter
2004-12-27, 16:55
mavman I was leaning toward the ladder bar because there already on there...I know its hard to tell by the pic but there are really beefy...at least 7/8" tubing. After I get it out and see exactly what I have I was gonna carry it to the welder and have him weld in the diagonal link or put a X shaped crossmember in there as well as check the integrity of the entire setup. I'm also gonna have an axle brace welded in. I may just endup chunking the setup and put a new framerail kit in...if I go that route i'll get the 4 link.
I trust my welder on this as he runs a 4 second tube chassis :tsk: Camaro:coco: as a hobby.

mavman
2004-12-27, 17:30
4 seconds in a camaro? Yeah...you got the :coco: part right!

riporter
2004-12-27, 17:40
If I hadn't seen it for myself I wouldn't beleive it either...it's a late 80's body and he can dust just about any car around these parts. Not bad for a HOBBY car.

Country Mav
2004-12-27, 19:24
Riporter, once again, you seem to be making great progress on a Maverick. Sounds like you're doing all of your homework, and that you have it under control. Good Luck!! Preston

PINKY
2004-12-27, 22:16
research.....ask questions......research....ask questions doing good Rick. mavman has made and given(as always) great advice.

PINKY
2004-12-27, 23:39
somewhat hesitant to post a pic since my stuff broke, but here is a decent shot of the front mounts for the ladder bar....pretty beafy.

riporter
2005-01-02, 13:03
John would there be any disadvantage to welding in metal that wraps completely around the axle and attaches to the ladder bar with a good weld joint...just to add some strength.

PINKY
2005-01-04, 00:46
John would there be any disadvantage to welding in metal that wraps completely around the axle and attaches to the ladder bar with a good weld joint...just to add some strength.


No...thats what you should do!
Thats what is being done to mine now.....now saying it would have helped.....a bad weld is a bad weld. it probably would have just taken longer to rear its ugly head....but maybe I might have seen some signs of fatige in time to save all the damage....who knows.
But to asnswer your question......weld a brace all the way around your axle tubes.