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    1. #1
      Join Date
      Jun 2005
      Location
      The Moon
      Posts
      426

      Independent Rear Suspension for a 70 Mustang

      I just bought a beautiful and totally solid 1970 Mach 1 this past weekend and of course I've got a list of mods lined up for it to do over the next couple years. One thing I've considered for a long time is getting a conversion kit to transplant an IRS from a 99-04 Cobra onto the car.

      DVS makes a kit to make this a bolt on job but I've not had any luck in finding someone who's done the conversion and can tell me how well it fit or how it affected the handling of the car. Has anyone on here done the conversion?

      I know there are a number of shortcomings with using the Cobra IRS, and I've heard that there are other companies that make stronger and lighter IRS kits that can be used with the DVS kit or are stand-alone bolt on systems. However I have not been able to locate a website or obtain any information on these aftermarket IRS's.

      Can anyone tell me their experience with an IRS conversion or get me some leads on an aftermarket IRS?

      -Jim...

      1970 Mustang Mach 1, Global West tubulars, roller bearing everything, del-a-lums, 355 Windsor Tremec TKO 600, lots more on the way
      A few other cool toys too


    2. #2
      Join Date
      May 2002
      Location
      Northern California
      Posts
      10,716
      Country Flag: United States
      Hi Jim, I spoke to a coupl guys that have run the set up and they were fairly satisfied with it. Most complaints where minor, the threat of breakage was a common concern. One guy complaint of a loud bang during hard acceleration another had a bad hop sensation when accelerating and during fast shifts.

      Most race fabricators can put a set up together for you using the stronger Dana 44 diff.ie: Wayne Due might be up to it.
      Not sure of your area but we might be setting up a shop near the "Sea of Tranquility" but that won't be till we get that whole breathing in a vacuum thingy.
      MrQuick ΜΟΛ'ΩΝ ΛΑΒ'Ε


    3. #3
      Join Date
      Jun 2002
      Location
      Benicia, CA
      Posts
      1,433
      Country Flag: United States

      Where???

      Quote Originally Posted by MrQuick
      Not sure of your area but we might be setting up a shop near the "Sea of Tranquility" but that won't be till we get that whole breathing in a vacuum thingy.
      Where in the heck is the "Sea of Tranquility" anyway??? You're not going to the Big House are you? It's all Allen's fault, I swear...
      Jeff
      1971 RS Camaro: PAINKILLER

    4. #4
      Join Date
      Dec 2003
      Location
      lost
      Posts
      2,607
      Jeff....The Sea of Tranquility is on the Moon. Note that Jim has "The Moon" for his location.

    5. #5
      Join Date
      Jun 2005
      Location
      The Moon
      Posts
      426
      Hey, thanks for the heads up. I forgot I put "the moon" in as my location. It's an old inside joke (stupid, I know!)

      I live in Cleveland. (I don't brag about it either) I should probably make note of that since now that I have a car, my location actually helps. (I've been on car forums for over 2 years during my search for a car, since I never had a car, there was no real point in my location)

      That being aside...

      MrQuick- the issues you mentioned (wheel hop, worries about breakage) are what I've been hearing and are common concerns with the Cobra IRS. Not to mention the setup is fairly heavy too.

      Who is Wayne Due? I've heard the name but mostly in Chevy circles. My only concern is a one off fabrication would wind up costing me a fortune, and I'm far from being made of money. Being an engineer I could design and fab a setup myself here at work and at home, but if there's something already in production I'd just as soon go with something that's already been tested (plus having a homemade IRS could lead to a lot of trouble!)

      In any case does Wayne Due have a website? If so can you post up the link?
      -Jim...

      1970 Mustang Mach 1, Global West tubulars, roller bearing everything, del-a-lums, 355 Windsor Tremec TKO 600, lots more on the way
      A few other cool toys too

    6. #6
      Join Date
      May 2002
      Location
      Northern California
      Posts
      10,716
      Country Flag: United States
      MrQuick ΜΟΛ'ΩΝ ΛΑΒ'Ε


    7. #7
      Join Date
      Jun 2005
      Location
      The Moon
      Posts
      426
      Well I emailed him but no response. It looks like he does Chevy stuff only so I guess I'll have to warm up the welder and get creative!
      -Jim...

      1970 Mustang Mach 1, Global West tubulars, roller bearing everything, del-a-lums, 355 Windsor Tremec TKO 600, lots more on the way
      A few other cool toys too

    8. #8
      Join Date
      May 2004
      Location
      Dallas, TX
      Posts
      864
      Country Flag: United States
      I was wondering why you want to put an IRS in this car? If you have not already you might want to cruise the late model Mustang forums....most of those guys hate the Cobra IRS. And alot of those guys have been pulling out the IRS and replacing it with a solid axle. Also did you notice Ford went back to a solid axle for the 06 Cobra?

      If you are dead set on an IRS you might want to consider the kit from CTM at http://www.geocities.com/ctmengineering/mustanghome.htm.
      This kit is based on an original Ford Design from the 60's that never made it into production. Because it was planned for production it is a complete bolt-in design.

      My 2 cents....a Martz Chassis 4 link coil-over conversion...

    9. #9
      Join Date
      May 2002
      Location
      Northern California
      Posts
      10,716
      Country Flag: United States
      cause its cool...he he
      MrQuick ΜΟΛ'ΩΝ ΛΑΒ'Ε


    10. #10
      Join Date
      Jun 2005
      Location
      The Moon
      Posts
      426
      I have read a lot of guys swapping the IRS for solid axles, and they're all drag racers. On a hard launch with slicks on a track you will break the IRS eventually. Plus there's some wheel hop in there.

      I'm not dead set on the IRS but it is an option I'd like to consider, partially for the smoother ride (not as much unspring weight bouncing around back there as you would with a solid axle on leaf springs), but also improved cornering on bumpy roads (which we have a lot of). Plus I'm finding used IRS's in junkyards from cars hit in the front for under $1500, so it's a relatively inexpensive swap.

      KM- I think I've seen the CTM kit before but couldn't find anyone who's done the swap other than the guy who makes it. I'm just trying to get someone's opinion of how the IRS changed the handling of the old cars, to see if it's worth it basically.

      I've considered 4 links but I'm trying to avoid permanent mods to the car because it is an original rust free Mach 1, and all the IRS swaps are bolt in. TCP has a nice looking laydown coil-over conversion but I've heard some pretty bad things about TCP's products so I'm probably ruling that setup out.
      -Jim...

      1970 Mustang Mach 1, Global West tubulars, roller bearing everything, del-a-lums, 355 Windsor Tremec TKO 600, lots more on the way
      A few other cool toys too

    11. #11
      Join Date
      Jun 2005
      Posts
      107
      my 2 cents. irs cars are a different animal when it comes to driving style, i dont think the unsprung weight should be a big deal, since the car isn't a race car. i would forget about the irs conversion, especially the cobra irs. if you are set on fixing the terrible factory rear set up.... go with the elenor style laydown coilovers. i dont think its 100% bolt in, but with the min of welding it requires.... i dont think it would be a big deal to "undo" someday.

      no matter what direction you go with the car, subframe connectors should be the number 1 priority.

    12. #12
      Join Date
      Jun 2005
      Location
      The Moon
      Posts
      426
      Point taken.

      Yes, subframe connectors will be going on the car, and I have a lot planned for the front, but at the moment there isn't much for the rear I can do other than 5-leaf aftermarket lowering springs. If the IRS is really that bad I'll start looking elsewhere.
      -Jim...

      1970 Mustang Mach 1, Global West tubulars, roller bearing everything, del-a-lums, 355 Windsor Tremec TKO 600, lots more on the way
      A few other cool toys too

    13. #13
      Join Date
      Dec 2004
      Posts
      371
      i doubt you'd be able to hurt a welll built irs with a mild 351w if you go to a stroker or a big block then it's a whole different story
      Do you have a 69 or 70 stang? If so then check out www.69STANG.com

    14. #14
      Join Date
      Jun 2005
      Posts
      10
      It's not exactly IRS (nor will the ride be as good) but have you concidered a Watts link setup. Many would argue it's the best way to go if you're gonna stay w/ solid axle. I know a guy in AV8SS (Brion Gluck) that runs a bolt-on kit from Fays2 (I think that's the spelling). It seems to work really well, and if he can't break something... it's unbreakable.

      Just food for thought.:3gears:

    15. #15
      Join Date
      Jul 2002
      Location
      Muskegon, MI
      Posts
      4,494
      Cool another IRS idea for an older car. Keep us updated on which rear end you decide to buy.
      Protour Pinto was able to find an IRS out of a Jag for only $250.00 You might want to shoot him a PM if you have any questions.
      Adam_______Offical Car Name "ILLUSION"
      383 Stroker, Stock cast heads, T-56 tranny, 4.11 gears, 2002 T/A dash, 4th gen interior including seatbelts, power lumbar seats, 18" Budnik Wheels, Hydraboost, QA1 shocks, DC Controller, Power steering conversion, fuel cell, unique exhaust set up........
      ILLUSION Website-----------Old Website--------------My Car on Lateral-g.net----------- Need something designed?-AdFabDesign

    16. #16
      Join Date
      Jun 2005
      Location
      The Moon
      Posts
      426
      bnickel- at the moment the engine is pretty mild, but I plan to build another 351W and the goal is 450HP. Your thoughts on how the IRS will hold up to that?

      ProjectJ- Watts links are the rear locating mechanism, correct? (I know what they are and how they work, but can't remember what they look like since I left my Vehicle Dynamics book at home, crap!) Can you get me a website with the setup you mentioned? I'd like to get some more info on this.

      CAMAROBOY69- I've heard of guys putting Jag IRS units into Cobra kit cars but I haven't heard of anythign else. I'll PM the guy you mentioned.
      -Jim...

      1970 Mustang Mach 1, Global West tubulars, roller bearing everything, del-a-lums, 355 Windsor Tremec TKO 600, lots more on the way
      A few other cool toys too

    17. #17
      Join Date
      Dec 2004
      Location
      Sarasota, Fl
      Posts
      1,717
      I'm finding all your threads a bit late, but as an alternative to a Cobra IRS, and since you mentioned that a 4 link might be tollerable, have you checked out air ride's bolt-in airbag 4 link kit? Bret Voelkel bought a '69 fastback just to do the R&D on the project and now has a very nice, completely bolt-in, no mods required, airbag system that supposedly handles fantastic and rides even better. Bret has been taking that '69 all over and getting tons of track time in it, so it mush handle pretty good. Plus you'd have instant ride height adjustment. Just a thought... check it out at www.ridetech.com

    18. #18
      Join Date
      Dec 2004
      Posts
      371
      wow i don't know what's up with my topic notification so i didn't know about your question. but yes the cobra irs should hold up fine behind 450hp 351w it's the torque that will kill at actually that's why i said it wouldn't handle a big block or maybe even a stroker.
      Do you have a 69 or 70 stang? If so then check out www.69STANG.com

    19. #19
      Join Date
      Jun 2005
      Posts
      10
      Quote Originally Posted by wantahertzdonut
      ProjectJ- Watts links are the rear locating mechanism, correct? (I know what they are and how they work, but can't remember what they look like since I left my Vehicle Dynamics book at home, crap!) Can you get me a website with the setup you mentioned? I'd like to get some more info on this.
      Yeah, it's basically just a different way of locating the housing. It seems to be the best compromise to help eliminate bind. here is a link to a company making them for those cars:
      http://www.fays2.net/

      This is a bit more of a race setup than street (rod-ends can be noisy and transmit alot of road noise), but it's certainly good for handling.

    20. #20
      Join Date
      Jun 2005
      Location
      The Moon
      Posts
      426
      Quote Originally Posted by ProjectJ
      Yeah, it's basically just a different way of locating the housing. It seems to be the best compromise to help eliminate bind. here is a link to a company making them for those cars:
      http://www.fays2.net/

      This is a bit more of a race setup than street (rod-ends can be noisy and transmit alot of road noise), but it's certainly good for handling.
      I'm glad I checked back on this thread, thanks for the heads up on that watts link setup, I think I may be looking into that setup, or making one of my own even. It's a lot more simple than I would have guessed.

      After driving my car more (going on 6 weeks of ownership now) I'm beginning to notice how much the car tends to want to kick the rear of the car out in turns. Even when going in a straight line on bumpy roads, the rear of the car tends to kick to the left. Am I safe to assume this is due to the rear axle shifting due to flex in the leaf springs? I know my bushings are probably shot and I need new springs and probably shocks, but I'm can I assume the remaining "drift" that can be eliminated with a watts link?
      -Jim...

      1970 Mustang Mach 1, Global West tubulars, roller bearing everything, del-a-lums, 355 Windsor Tremec TKO 600, lots more on the way
      A few other cool toys too

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