wcn2018 said:
In reply to Pete. (l33t FS) :
what you describe worries me, but im not sure i know what you mean. are you saying the rear link geometry places the roll center near the roof, compared to the center point on the watts that would be higher, which would want to force the body of the car towards the outside of a turn relative to the axle and strain the bushings laterally? the t3 links are much more compliant than the stock links in my opinion. being a ball joint, they have quite a range of free motion in all directions. but they have no lateral compliance compared to rubber, is that the concern?
ive noticed decreased binding and better rear axle articulation with t3. i also took off the rear sway bar. when i ran the car bone stock last year, the rear would slide so much due to the axle not wanting to articulate in corners and lifting the inside tire. i still lose one tire sometimes, but im ascribing that to an open diff.
The rear suspension must have a lot of compliance in the bushings or it will not work.
Here is a test you can do: Support the car by the body, remove the stabilizer bar and the rear springs, and support the rearend in the center at ride height. Unbolt one of the upper links. Articulate the suspension, and watch as the bolt hole will not line up unless the link was an inch longer when articulated one way, or an inch shorter when articulated the other way. That is what I am talking about, the two different roll centers mean the bushings must all have an amount of compliance.
The rear suspension links must be soft and compliant if the rear suspension is to move. If you replace the bushings with solid joints, the suspension will not be able to articulate without tearing the links off of the chassis. That difference in length has to come from somewhere.
A company that offers solid joints for the rear suspension, when these issues have been known literally for 45 years, indicates that they are either not capable of engineering performance components, or they are not interested as long as they get your money.
The racing fix was to replace the upper bushings with roll bar padding, and install a 3rd link aka "traction bar".