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    1. #1
      Join Date
      Dec 2008
      Location
      Lehigh Valley Pa
      Posts
      1,269

      Are these beautiful or what? Now with install pics

      Well on Monday I ordered new rear lower control arms for my Custom Cruiser. I want this car to handle even better than it currently does which is pretty darn well. And in order to do this I need a rear swaybar. Now there are options out there for swaybars but most rear bars are so big they almost require a new front bar. And I am not yet at that point. So I needed another option, and I found it with these Metco billet aluminum LCA's. With these you can mount a stock sedan rear swaybar. They figured out that all one needed to do was to move the mounting holes further forward on the arms. You will notice that there are 3 holes on each arm for swaybars. The 2 most rear holes are for the wagon bar and the 2 most forward ones are for the sedan bar. These LCA's are truely beautiful.



      1996 Federal Cadillac hearse
      1988 Eureka Chevy hearse

    2. #2
      Join Date
      Dec 2008
      Location
      Lehigh Valley Pa
      Posts
      1,269
      Ok I am back after the install and I am beaten and bruised. The arms were tough to get off. Seems GM thought it was a good idea to put the forward mounting bolts in thru the boxed frame. What a pain. But I got it all done. Here is the bar with the channel that slips into the frame rail.

      And a close up of the channel

      And the bar without. This is all I will need to bolt it to the Metco arms besides their hardware.

      Now some pics of just the Metco arms mounted.




      And with the swaybar mounted



      1996 Federal Cadillac hearse
      1988 Eureka Chevy hearse

    3. #3
      Join Date
      Mar 2006
      Posts
      27
      nice buy. those are clean, time to get the rest of the underside going

    4. #4
      Join Date
      Nov 2008
      Location
      Thomasville, NC
      Posts
      202
      Country Flag: United States
      Nice!
      1966 Pontiac Catalina Ventura
      389/TH400, Wide-Track Darksider
      Bars, springs, disc brakes, etc.

      1962 Falcon 2-dr
      "just getting started"

    5. #5
      Join Date
      Jul 2008
      Location
      Bethlehem PA
      Posts
      183
      Country Flag: United States
      WOW !! That is a Sweet Setup !!
      John at SC&C
      Savitske Classic and Custom
      NEW # 610-381-6100

      '87 Buick Regal Turbo T - Since New
      Lots of SC&C, Fays2 Watts Link
      Boze Pro Touring wheels,
      Baer 13" Pro+ & SS4+
      Shaved door handles
      Custom S/S Exhaust

    6. #6
      Join Date
      Jul 2005
      Location
      Cumberland, Maryland
      Posts
      552
      Country Flag: United States
      They sure are pretty. What kind of bushings are in them? I cant really tell from the photos.

    7. #7
      Join Date
      Jul 2005
      Location
      Mountain View, CA
      Posts
      9,583
      Country Flag: United States
      You sure about the install on that sway bar?
      True T.

      Whats new with Project 1/2-Trak?


      Follow my wisecracks on Sports, Food, Politics and other BS on Twitter.

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      When they kick out your front door, How you gonna come?
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    8. #8
      Join Date
      Jul 2005
      Location
      Cumberland, Maryland
      Posts
      552
      Country Flag: United States
      Quote Originally Posted by Damn True View Post
      You sure about the install on that sway bar?
      Wow. I didn't notice the lack of sway bar bushings, whats the story there?

      On the LCA side of things, apparently Metco uses poly bushing on both ends, I know on my rear suspension this leads to binding. But they are pretty.

    9. #9
      Join Date
      Dec 2008
      Location
      Lehigh Valley Pa
      Posts
      1,269
      On the B-Body wagons the swaybar bolts directly to the LCA's. It is a totally unique way to do it. It does not bolt in anyway to the rearend housing. There is also no buchings used to mount the swaybar. The LCA's have poly bushings in each end. It would have been better to have a heim or johny joint in one end but oh well. I bought these particular arms because it allows me to mount either a sedan swaybar or a wagon bar. I wanted to take things slow with my suspension mods. It has been a great method for me in the past rather than throwing multiple mods at a car and then not knowing whats wrong. It handles so good right now that I am wondering if I should tinker with it.
      1996 Federal Cadillac hearse
      1988 Eureka Chevy hearse

    10. #10
      Join Date
      Dec 2006
      Location
      Out of the Burbs of Detroit to SoCal, then onto my ancestral homeland, the woods of Cascadia
      Posts
      1,753
      Country Flag: United States
      G body is similiar to Stick's car. Not everything is a Camaro.

      Yeah stick, I'd have probbaly stuck Johnnies in the arm, since it will bind in roll. I'm using the currietrac tubular LCA for that reason
      Greg Fast
      (yes, the last name is spelled correctly)

      1970 Camaro RS Clone
      1984 el Camino
      1973 MGB vintage E/Prod race car
      (Soon to be an SCCA H/Prod limited prep)

    11. #11
      Join Date
      Jul 2005
      Location
      Mountain View, CA
      Posts
      9,583
      Country Flag: United States
      What is the swaybar doing that the rear end housing is not already doing?

      True T.

      Whats new with Project 1/2-Trak?


      Follow my wisecracks on Sports, Food, Politics and other BS on Twitter.

      My blog

      When they kick out your front door, How you gonna come?
      With your hands on your head, Or on the trigger of your gun?


    12. #12
      Join Date
      Dec 2008
      Location
      Lehigh Valley Pa
      Posts
      1,269
      Quote Originally Posted by Damn True View Post
      What is the swaybar doing that the rear end housing is not already doing?

      It acts just like any other swaybar. It's just mounted different. The arms of the swaybar resist the twist of the car when it leans. The rearend housing does not
      1996 Federal Cadillac hearse
      1988 Eureka Chevy hearse

    13. #13
      Join Date
      Aug 2004
      Location
      Dunwoody, GA
      Posts
      4,984
      Country Flag: United States
      That's weird and I'm not sure correct at all. Someone's going to need to give a dynamics answer to this because as it sits, I'm with True. That bar is doing nothing more than the rear axle is already doing. Sure it's adding more resistance because it is there but I bet with it mounted to the rear end or with drop links somehow like a 2nd gen, the bar would work loads better.

      The LCAs are pretty though
      Trey

      "The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese."
      ~ Jon Hammond

      1979 WS6 Trans Am stock LT1/T56 drive train out of my Formula. BMW M-parallel rims. C5/C6 brakes

      build thread https://www.pro-touring.com/showthre...ghlight=begins

    14. #14
      Join Date
      Aug 2006
      Location
      Houston, TX
      Posts
      103
      I can see it, and it is correct. That sway bar is bolted in two different locations on each side - think about the controls arms trying to move in opposite directions (i.e., body roll), and how this configuration would work against that.

      Quote Originally Posted by WS6 View Post
      That's weird and I'm not sure correct at all. Someone's going to need to give a dynamics answer to this because as it sits, I'm with True. That bar is doing nothing more than the rear axle is already doing. Sure it's adding more resistance because it is there but I bet with it mounted to the rear end or with drop links somehow like a 2nd gen, the bar would work loads better.

      The LCAs are pretty though

    15. #15
      Join Date
      Mar 2002
      Location
      Redwood City, CA
      Posts
      1,895,413,640
      Country Flag: United States
      Quote Originally Posted by Damn True View Post
      What is the swaybar doing that the rear end housing is not already doing?
      True, look at a 64-72 A-Body and ask the same thing. They mount quite similar. Personally, I like the DSE rear sway bar setup if you actually need one on an A-Body.
      Allen Ortega
      Meanstreets Performance Fabrication

      ---------------------------------------

      Vegetarians are the reason for global warming

    16. #16
      Join Date
      Nov 2008
      Location
      So. Cal.
      Posts
      1,240
      Country Flag: United States
      Quote Originally Posted by WS6 View Post
      That's weird and I'm not sure correct at all. Someone's going to need to give a dynamics answer to this because as it sits, I'm with True. That bar is doing nothing more than the rear axle is already doing. Sure it's adding more resistance because it is there but I bet with it mounted to the rear end or with drop links somehow like a 2nd gen, the bar would work loads better.

      The LCAs are pretty though
      Its a simple torsion bar. As one arm wants to move up or down it forces the other to do the same thing even though it doesnt want to in a turn. Pretty simple really. Some bushings would help but I dont even see them as being needed, there is no frame mount, no noise transfer. And as far as binding goes, thats its purpose, to bind the left and right. Just a simple torsion spring attaching two levers. GM kinda worked that out awhile ago. Just a big spring linking the travels of the arms.. JR

    17. #17
      Join Date
      Sep 2006
      Location
      Henderson,NV
      Posts
      2,870
      Country Flag: United States
      I'm not sold on it either. I want to control the body.
      Todd

    18. #18
      Join Date
      Apr 2009
      Location
      san diego
      Posts
      5,101
      Country Flag: United States
      my 95 stang had a bar just like that. i broke it in half after upgrading my control arms to solid ends. i like the car better without it, not sure if it even did anything

    19. #19
      Join Date
      Dec 2008
      Location
      Lehigh Valley Pa
      Posts
      1,269
      Here are pics that clearly show that the swaybar works just like any other swaybar. Afterall why would GM design it this way? Why would companies like Metco, Hotchkiss, Spohn and others make LCA's that follow the same design?




      1996 Federal Cadillac hearse
      1988 Eureka Chevy hearse

    20. #20
      Join Date
      Mar 2008
      Posts
      952
      GM built tens of millions of cars with sway bars mounted like that- starting with the first A bodies in the 60's and going all the way up to the 96 B bodies (Caprice, Impala SS).
      it's not ideal, but it's cheap and light and it works.
      as to why companies put mounts for that style of bar on their lower control arms- it's so the customer can put their new arms on the car and not have to spend more $$$ on a different sway bar.
      a few companies are now making the Camaro style bar that mounts using bushings an end links. to read all their ads and read their web pages, you'd think that they just invented something totally new and didn't just look under any Camaro built between '67 and '02 and say "hey, i can make that fit G body, too".

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