1970 Maverick project.

Discussion in 'General Maverick/Comet' started by maverick600, Nov 26, 2019.

  1. CA189HJN

    CA189HJN Robert Couse-Baker

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    Thanks for the correction!
     
  2. maverick600

    maverick600 Member

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    I have a question for the masses, car runs great when the vac advance is not hooked up. I went and bought a new vac hose hoping it was that but when it's running and I suck on the hose, it still runs like doodoo. The vac advance does hold a vac when put on it, doesnt bleed off which tells me the diaphragm is still good. Any suggestions?
     
  3. maverick600

    maverick600 Member

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    Ok. For those that havent been subject to my threads/posts. My 3 way vent system for my fuel tank(thank you California emissions) is broken and of course it is not remanufactured. I took my tank to a welder to see if he could plug the existing hole and make a new one for a normal vent valve. He wouldn't touch it, said it would be to hard, blah, blah, blah. So I got creative and purchased an assortment of vacuum connectors. Drilled out the holes progressing slowly to the right size and I am able to use them and hook my tank back up using the existing system. I'm gonna use some RTV or some sealant so it doesnt leak but they are a pretty snug fit. The shorter holes ones I will cut of the connector to make them fit flush.
    Who saves you cant engineer...saves me $300.00 on a new tank.
    20191203_165721.jpg 20191203_165742.jpg 20191203_165929.jpg 20191203_171059.jpg
     
  4. maverick600

    maverick600 Member

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    Final result. May have to super glue the shorter ones but I'll see after I let them set over night.
    15754162394077800883532710265899.jpg
     
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  5. maverick600

    maverick600 Member

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    Well I got everything hooked back up once my sending unit showed up today. The arm is longer than what I am assuming is the original. I have about half a tank of fuel but it is only reading a 1/4 tank. Is there anyway to make it accurate?
    As far as driveability of the car, front end is definitely out of whack. Suspension is gonna have to be changed for sure BUT it drove down the road to the gas station, shifted good although i didnt push it over 30mph.
    Any suggestions on parts? Control arm replacement or just bushings? I'm gonna check out to see what Moog has to offer but I'm sure there are folks out there with opinions.
     
  6. CA189HJN

    CA189HJN Robert Couse-Baker

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    When I awoke my '73 from three decades of slumber, I only replaced the most horribly worn front-end components. Bad idea. I should have done everything all at once. My next project is the last third of the suspension rebuild: upper control arms, spring perches, spring isolators, strut-rod bushings and another alignment. Mavericks handle well and are non-scary when all the wear parts are working as the Ford family engineers intended.
     
  7. maverick600

    maverick600 Member

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    Spring isolators?? And the strut rods are the rods from under the radiator that go back and are adjustable?
     
  8. CA189HJN

    CA189HJN Robert Couse-Baker

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    Yes. Spring isolators are those rubber disks that prevent noisy metal-to-metal contact where the coil spring seats. And the part of the strut rod assembly that gets replaced are the rubber bushings under the radiator (the other end is bolted to the lower control rod). I'm just recommending doing the entire front suspension all at once (something I didn't do myself).
     
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  9. mojo

    mojo "Everett"- Senior Citizen Supporting Member

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    I agree w/ the previous post -- do all suspension at once. Get one alignment and be done with it.
    If going w/ control arm bushing, go w/ screw in type. I made the mistake of buying press-in's and could never get them pressed in the arm. I would replace the entire upper arm at about $65.00 ea., is probably the easiest way to go, that's what I wound-up doing -- wish I had did it from start. Isolaters go on top of the spring and tower-make sure you have it oriented correctly. Be careful w/ spring removal "Could Be Harmful to Your Health".
     
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  10. maverick600

    maverick600 Member

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    I am in agreement on replacing everything. I have read about the coil spring saddles...I guess they move with the car instead of being stationary?
     
  11. maverick600

    maverick600 Member

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    I appreciate all the help guys, I placed my orders today for my front end parts:
    Moog:
    Inner and outer tie rods
    Strut rod bushings
    Sway bar end links
    Tie rod adjusting sleeves
    Upper and lower control arms
    Auto Krafters:
    Centerlink
    CJ Pony:
    Coil Spring Isolators
    Amazon:
    Idler Arm..which was cheaper than Rock Auto after shipping.

    Only thing left is the coil spring saddles, I plan on driving the car but nothing dramatic but wasn't sure if the roller bearing saddles would be worth the cost, especially since the old style have worked over the years.
     
  12. William623

    William623 Member Supporting Member

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    I say go ahead and get the roller spring saddles, I have had a set on my car for 4 years now and 10K miles late I still have no issues with them. Even as a regular driver there is a noticeable difference in handling especially when you are going around a corner. It is worth the money if you have the extra budget.
     
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  13. maverick600

    maverick600 Member

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    What's the best tool to use for compressing the springs? I have searched and read on here and others seem to have their own opinions. I have a 4 part compressor but not sure that it's going to work after reading.
     
  14. William623

    William623 Member Supporting Member

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    I have used this style multiple times with out issue. Just go slow and do NOT use a impact gun.
     
  15. William623

    William623 Member Supporting Member

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