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    1. #1
      Join Date
      Feb 2005
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      Waterloo, Ia
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      Speedtech AFX spindle vs stock spindle+tall Howe balljoints

      I'm currently running SC&C's SPC upper and lower A arms with the screw in Howe tall ball joints in my 67' GTO. Im also going to be running Kore3 Z51 brakes in the front. In the future iv'e considered going to Speedtech AFX spindles but i'm wondering what the real world differences are between the Speedtech spindle and the stock spindle + tall ball joints.

      Discuss

      -Nick
      -1967 GTO I drive and race
      -Build threads:
      -http://forums.maxperformanceinc.com/forums/showthread.php?t=615847&page=23
      -https://www.pro-touring.com/showthre...project-thread



    2. #2
      Join Date
      Dec 2008
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      If I'm not mistaken, the tall ball joints will only cure the camber issue caused by the factory spindle height. The AFX spindle offers improved geometry with the revised steering arm location and arm design improves bumpsteer.
      Big dreams, small pockets....

      Chris--
      '72 Cutlass S LSA/T56 Magnum
      Bowler Performance, Forgeline, Speedtech, ATS, Speartech, KORE3, Ridetech coilovers

      Project Motor City Madness

    3. #3
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      Apr 2010
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      Pittsburgh, PA
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      On that note I think what Chris me turned above applied to the tall version of the fax and not the stock height version
      72 buick skylark
      twin-turbo fuel injected buick 350..perhaps stroked to 370 in the works!

    4. #4
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      Quote Originally Posted by Nothingface5384 View Post
      On that note I think what Chris me turned above applied to the tall version of the fax and not the stock height version
      Correct, I am referring to the tall version. If you use the short version, there would still be a need for the tall BJ.
      Big dreams, small pockets....

      Chris--
      '72 Cutlass S LSA/T56 Magnum
      Bowler Performance, Forgeline, Speedtech, ATS, Speartech, KORE3, Ridetech coilovers

      Project Motor City Madness

    5. #5
      Join Date
      Jul 2012
      Location
      Iowa
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      From a safety stand point if you plan on alot of auto-x or doing some track days the AFX spindle has a stronger wheel bearing in it. I talked to Ron Sutton a bit about this for my Olds and they have horrible small bearings, and he said for piece of mind I should trade them out after each track day or every few auto-x. Im pretty sure yours are a bit larger but not by much. He also said even for my C4 corvette I should put new bearings in every year if tracked regularly. The AFX spindles have the sealed C5 bearings and there have been people tracking on them with not problems.
      Miles Boyer
      The car hobby is dangerous,if the speed doesn't kill you, the cost of parts will.
      91 V8 S10
      88 Cutlass Pro-Tour
      97 Chevy lifted Z-71
      96 Corvette

    6. #6
      Join Date
      Feb 2005
      Location
      Waterloo, Ia
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      So i'm already set up with the SPC arms with tall ball joints. If I did the short version of the AFX spindles with the tall ball joints, do I get the same benefit as the taller spindle with the standard balljoint?
      -Nick
      -1967 GTO I drive and race
      -Build threads:
      -http://forums.maxperformanceinc.com/forums/showthread.php?t=615847&page=23
      -https://www.pro-touring.com/showthre...project-thread


    7. #7
      Join Date
      Jul 2012
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      Iowa
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      Quote Originally Posted by Nicks67GTO View Post
      So i'm already set up with the SPC arms with tall ball joints. If I did the short version of the AFX spindles with the tall ball joints, do I get the same benefit as the taller spindle with the standard balljoint?
      Im interested to hear the answer to this question. I bought a set of SPC arms with tall AFX spindles used and it didn't come with good ball joints. I had already purchased the tall ball joints for a different set of arms awhile back and was just planning on using them with the tall spindles that I have now. Hopefully someone will chime in and answer your question.
      Miles Boyer
      The car hobby is dangerous,if the speed doesn't kill you, the cost of parts will.
      91 V8 S10
      88 Cutlass Pro-Tour
      97 Chevy lifted Z-71
      96 Corvette

    8. #8
      Join Date
      Mar 2009
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      Houston, TX
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      Quote Originally Posted by Nicks67GTO View Post
      So i'm already set up with the SPC arms with tall ball joints. If I did the short version of the AFX spindles with the tall ball joints, do I get the same benefit as the taller spindle with the standard balljoint?
      Talk to Marcus at SC&C. I have the same set up you have, although mine is for a 67 Firebird. IIRC, Marcus basically said to get the full benefit of the AFX spindle, a tall AFX spindle should be used with a regular BJ. I could be wrong, but I "think" you can run into BJ bind if a tall BJ is used with a tall AFX spindle.
      Tu Ho
      Firebird V2-LS swap

    9. #9
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      Quote Originally Posted by Nicks67GTO View Post
      So i'm already set up with the SPC arms with tall ball joints. If I did the short version of the AFX spindles with the tall ball joints, do I get the same benefit as the taller spindle with the standard balljoint?
      What the tall ball joint does is move the pickup point to the same location or close to the location of the tall spindle. I opted for the tall AFX because I would never have to worry about finding a replacement ball joint if there was an emergency. Good luck finding a tall BJ on the road at your local NAPA....
      Big dreams, small pockets....

      Chris--
      '72 Cutlass S LSA/T56 Magnum
      Bowler Performance, Forgeline, Speedtech, ATS, Speartech, KORE3, Ridetech coilovers

      Project Motor City Madness

    10. #10
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      Feb 2005
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      Quote Originally Posted by csouth View Post
      What the tall ball joint does is move the pickup point to the same location or close to the location of the tall spindle. I opted for the tall AFX because I would never have to worry about finding a replacement ball joint if there was an emergency. Good luck finding a tall BJ on the road at your local NAPA....
      If i'm being totally honest here I got the SPC A Arms with the screw in ball joints.... short or tall i'm guessing neither are available at any local parts house?
      -Nick
      -1967 GTO I drive and race
      -Build threads:
      -http://forums.maxperformanceinc.com/forums/showthread.php?t=615847&page=23
      -https://www.pro-touring.com/showthre...project-thread


    11. #11
      Join Date
      Jul 2013
      Location
      St. George, UT
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      I think the screw in ball joints are a factory Mopar style, you'll have to ask Mark or SPC about that one to verify. I also had the screw in ball joints in the SPC arms I took off my car. They were Howe joints, although as I mentioned I think the screw in design is based on a Mopar thing. Mine were awfully loose after only a short time driving, but I've read that Howe intends them to be loose to cut down on friction in circle track cars so I never tried to replace them. I never contacted Howe about this so I can't verify that info.

      Our standard height ATS/ AFX spindle has a 1" drop, new upgraded 2013 ZO6 hubs, C5+ brake caliper bosses, relocated billet steering arms to help eliminate bumpsteer and it is made of 6061 T6 aluminum. They are stock height ball joint to ball joint. Adding a tall ball joint is fine and would be the same gain as adding a tall ball joint to a factory spindle.

      For those serious about performance, our tall height spindle is almost 2" taller than the standard height, which means a standard spindle with a 1/2" tall ball joint is only about 25% of the gain you'd see with the tall spindle. The tall spindle is made of even stronger 7075 T73 aluminum. It also has the 1" drop, the C5+ brake mounts, the relocated billet steering arms, and the '13 ZO6 hubs.

      Here is a link to our A body AFX spindles for more info. Speedtech/ ATS spindles

      Hope this info is what you were looking for. If you have specific questions about our spindles or any of our A body products please feel free to ask here, pm, or give us a call at 435.628.4300.
      Last edited by Ben@SpeedTech; 10-14-2014 at 09:29 AM.
      -Ben, Creative Director at Speedtech Performance
      We sell some really cool parts, build cool cars, and do cool concept renderings too!
      435-628-4300 www.speedtechperformance.com
      My Pumkinator build thread- https://www.pro-touring.com/showthre...ght=pumkinator

    12. #12
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      Ben- Do you know what would happen if you ran the tall Bj's with the tall spindles?
      Miles Boyer
      The car hobby is dangerous,if the speed doesn't kill you, the cost of parts will.
      91 V8 S10
      88 Cutlass Pro-Tour
      97 Chevy lifted Z-71
      96 Corvette

    13. #13
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      Quote Originally Posted by silvermonte View Post
      Ben- Do you know what would happen if you ran the tall Bj's with the tall spindles?
      That's too much height. In this case "if some is good then more must be better" doesn't apply. The spindle is the ideal way to go and is the height it is because of extensive engineering. Remember the concept is to maximize camber gain without throwing things out of whack. The stock height spindle with taller ball joints is a cheaper, albeit less effective way to try to accomplish improved geometry results.

      Hope that makes sense.
      -Ben, Creative Director at Speedtech Performance
      We sell some really cool parts, build cool cars, and do cool concept renderings too!
      435-628-4300 www.speedtechperformance.com
      My Pumkinator build thread- https://www.pro-touring.com/showthre...ght=pumkinator

    14. #14
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      Quote Originally Posted by Nicks67GTO View Post
      If i'm being totally honest here I got the SPC A Arms with the screw in ball joints.... short or tall i'm guessing neither are available at any local parts house?
      That's true. Full disclosure helps...lol
      Big dreams, small pockets....

      Chris--
      '72 Cutlass S LSA/T56 Magnum
      Bowler Performance, Forgeline, Speedtech, ATS, Speartech, KORE3, Ridetech coilovers

      Project Motor City Madness

    15. #15
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      Mar 2005
      Location
      St George Utah
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      What is the obsession with at SPC arms on A and G Body's? someone needs to fill me in! how often are you guys planning on adjusting the alignment? I have no problem building adjustable arms if there is a logical reason to do it
      Blake Foster
      www.speedtechperformance.com
      435-628-4300
      St. George Utah.
      it's always sunny here.

    16. #16
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      I cant say for the A bodys, but since I own a G-body I think it has to do with what you see used more often. I dont think it has anything to do with being adjustable. Off the top of my head I can think of ridetech, SPC, UMI and Spohn that offer a-arms. Out of those 4 I have only seen ridetech and SPC stuff being used in a auto-x or on a track. I wont count drag cars and show cars because I dont give two hoots about that. I bought a entire front end set up used and got a pretty decent deal with it. I knew I wanted the AFX spindle and if I hadnt got the deal I did I most likely would of went with your kit.
      Miles Boyer
      The car hobby is dangerous,if the speed doesn't kill you, the cost of parts will.
      91 V8 S10
      88 Cutlass Pro-Tour
      97 Chevy lifted Z-71
      96 Corvette

    17. #17
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      Feb 2005
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      Quote Originally Posted by killer69 View Post
      What is the obsession with at SPC arms on A and G Body's? someone needs to fill me in! how often are you guys planning on adjusting the alignment? I have no problem building adjustable arms if there is a logical reason to do it
      I don't want shims if i don't have to have them. With a 45 year old frame that had loose tolerances from the factory, iv'e seen some serious stacks of shims to get everything aligned properly. If you own a Pontiac with headers and there are a lot of shims, you will have header clearance problems. If you have ever owned a Poncho with headers, youll know what i'm talking about with the stock A arm interference. The other thing is that I liked the SC&C setup and customer service. Marc seemed to really know his stuff and have a sincere passion for making the old boats handle well. I read his book and it all made sense so I called him, listened for 2 hours and I decided to go with his parts. He was recommended over and over so I pretty much bought in on positive recommendations.
      -Nick
      -1967 GTO I drive and race
      -Build threads:
      -http://forums.maxperformanceinc.com/forums/showthread.php?t=615847&page=23
      -https://www.pro-touring.com/showthre...project-thread


    18. #18
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      Jun 2011
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      Sorry to hijack for a minute-

      SPC makes a nice product. So do some of the other manufacturers of upper control arms. The point here is that all of their competitors are wondering why the swarm to their upper control arms? What makes maybe 50% + of A body owners and maybe 75%+ of G body owners pay more for them? Why are they considered better than a solid arm?

      I see your points, they are good ones. Marc does have a great passion for this, is very knowledgeable, enjoys getting old cars to handle better and has written a great book that Speedtech endorses in our catalog. But aside from the book, other companies like Speedtech Performance for example, have those qualities too. We aren't out just to follow the crowd and get a piece of the $ pie, we build parts with the intent to make cars handle better plain and simple. Our goal is doing this with high quality customer service. There are always people that whine and no one can please, but aside from them you'll find our customer service average is highly rated, we genuinely care that you're satisfied with your products. We even have a customer feedback form link on our website and welcome both positive and negative feedback so we can provide our customers with better products.

      As with other companies we have lots of cars with our parts running in events and races. We just like to keep pricing lower rather than jack them up so we can be in everyone's face at every event with marketing. The budget for that stuff doesn't magically appear out of nowhere, it's built into the cost of the parts and paid for by those who buy them. We'd probably have more A & G bodies equipped with our parts but we see again and again and again SPC arms on these cars.

      The Pontiac power plant makes a lot of sense. A decent quality arm, for example the Speedtech arms have a billet cross shaft that is machined differently on either side so that you have two options of where to start your alignment settings. Putting it on the aggressive side means less shims to deal with.

      I had SPCs on my G Body before I came to work here at Speedtech. The main reason I bought those is for the same reason listed above, everyone else had them on G bodies. SC&C isn't the only place to get them but I bought mine from them because he took the time with me on the phone. I put them in, had the alignment set once, and never touched them again. I've asked around what was the real benefit to these on my car and so far haven't gotten a decent answer outside of the header clearance issue on Poncho motors.

      I recently installed different sway bars and changed my G body to coilovers all around. In the process I wanted to do an experiment and replaced my SPCs with Speedtech upper arms. To be fair in the comparison I installed the 1/2" taller lower and upper ball joints for use with the same factory spindles I used before. Right off the bat with no shims I had almost 5* of positive castor and almost a full degree of negative camber. a couple of thin shims added and the car is ready to go racing.

      Although I can't say the control arms made all the difference, but right out of the box and after a few clicks on the compression on the shocks I was running the same autox times I ran with my old set up which I felt was maxed out. Since then a front spring change and a rear control arm position change with my Speedtech rear adjustable brackets the car has surpassed what it did before. There's lots more adjustment still in it for better performance which equates to even better handling than I had before.

      The next thing I want to add on is as stated above, the AFX spindles.

      Sorry again for the hijack, I'm just one of those guys that paid more for the SPCs and can't figure out why.
      -Ben, Your friendly neighborhood Rendering dude

      SRD on Facebook

      79 Cutlass wagon build


    19. #19
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      Aug 2004
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      Quote Originally Posted by SRD art View Post
      Sorry to hijack for a minute-

      I recently installed different sway bars and changed my G body to coilovers all around. In the process I wanted to do an experiment and replaced my SPCs with Speedtech upper arms. To be fair in the comparison I installed the 1/2" taller lower and upper ball joints for use with the same factory spindles I used before. Right off the bat with no shims I had almost 5* of positive castor and almost a full degree of negative camber. a couple of thin shims added and the car is ready to go racing.

      Although I can't say the control arms made all the difference, but right out of the box and after a few clicks on the compression on the shocks I was running the same autox times I ran with my old set up which I felt was maxed out. Since then a front spring change and a rear control arm position change with my Speedtech rear adjustable brackets the car has surpassed what it did before. There's lots more adjustment still in it for better performance which equates to even better handling than I had before.
      No, you certainly can't say the arms made all the difference when you also changed sway bars and shocks before your "test." The change in UCAs likely had no impact on how your car handled, with any changes in handling being much more the result of different sway bars, shocks and possibly the alignment.
      Mike Kelcy - '68 Camaro with some stuff done to it.

    20. #20
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      You're exactly right. That's why I stated that.

      It's safe however to say that the control arms may have affected in some way part of the whole difference in the handling improvement, mainly because no two brand control arms are made on the same jig, their designs are completely different and that means their geometry settings are likely different proprietary to each manufacturer. I.e. is it not safe to say that two different control arms will affect camber gain differently based on their design? The difference mine may have made however would be impossible to quantify unless that's all I changed this time around.

      One point of the experiment was to find out if I could easily get the same alignment settings with a standard solid arm and shims as I could with SPCs. As I pointed out above, I did, in fact it was easier. It didn't take a specialty shop 2 hours to do it, anybody with an alignment rack, a box end wrench, and a few shims can easily duplicate the alignment settings I had before with the new solid arms. The other point I was trying to discover is if a different combination of parts other than what is "most popular" i.e. what everyone seems to think is the best option could yield at least the same results. I did that too. The final point was what you're eluding to. Generally speaking about an entire suspension design, a control arm alone won't make a huge difference in a car's handling. Any decent arm builder has taken into account geometry when they designed them. So what's the harm in asking a simple question, with all the high quality options out there why does everyone flock to what appears simply to be what is popular? I think it's fair to say you can get the same results with different options. If we all flock to the same choice in life because that's what everybody else is doing, then why bother having more than one choice or even the ability to think bout it?

      Of course I'm saying this with a grin.
      -Ben, Your friendly neighborhood Rendering dude

      SRD on Facebook

      79 Cutlass wagon build


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