New Wagon Build, and my Ute, cutting metal n stuff, coil overs, long arms (1 Viewer)

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I sort of caught the tail wind of fourms.
I got my licence and a 80 just as Facebook groups begin to take off, always ended up here when I googled something and most of the time the was an answer already.

It’s weird to think all the times I’ve asked on Facebook groups for if people have done something such as a 4 link, torsion swaybars, cutting up and ruining the reliability of my car and gotten stupid replies on why would you bother blah blah blah.
And after going though a few build thread’s on here people actually have.

The OP's got some real Mad Max skills.
No I don’t hahaha, Im probably on the spectrum and just totally over thought my suspension set up for some reason.

Probably should get back into this and get the arms cut before Xmas..

Started thinking about the rear end and what I want to do there.
I have a pair of 10.5” 2.5 body radflos that would slip straight in with minimal work and just 2” springs…


Or a mate has this hoop he cut off his Ute when he changed set ups..
I have a set of 12” 2.5 body foxes laying around too which should work with “minor” trimming of the wagon body

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Which then also leads us down the rabbit hole of making the rear end work better.
I could:
A: just extend the lower links forwards on the same angle they are on, until they basically just clear the under side of the rail and dick around with the upper links remaining 5 link.
Which would allow me to keep the main tank
Make the under side a little smoother as I could make the lower link bracket like a ramp.

B, double triangulate it ditch the main tank like the Ute was planned to be. Lower links tucked up beside the rail on the inside. And have the main tank in the sub tanks spot.

C: Build a crossmember like nukegoat did, lowers sit under the main tank/rail

The only reason I’m really reluctant to have s*** hanging below the chassis rail is the type of wheeling we do. A lot of it is sharp steps which the lower link brackets catch on.
there have been instances where Nissan patrols (which have short little arms that run on terrible angles with terrible geometry) actually drive the steps easier than buggies do as the bottom of the chassis rail is flat shown here.

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Basically I’m trying to find a happy medium between something that has half decent geometry.
While not act like a anchor such as the standard 80 lower brackets do
 
B seems like the answer to me. Everything else is a bit of a half-done type of build. You can't for example just lengthen RLCA without dealing with uppers too. It is all a can of worms, why not just start from scratch and build it how it should be, geometry wise?

I would also consider wheel base, since shelves, ledges, steep inclines are often easier with a wheelbase in the 116-120" range vs a stock 80's 112".

Cheers
 
Alright started up my complicated cardboard aided design process.
I’d also like to point out I’m no expert just a bloke in a double car garage having a go with a few smart mates.

So I layed the radius arm on some cardboard and hit it with a hammer like a caveman to mark the bush positions. Traced around the outside. Made the end 280mm longer.

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I made a second template of just the bush end, moved it around as to make my life way easier in the future with the panhard bracket.

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Put new bush position onto template

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So that’s the first of probably a few templates before I go get the arms cut out of 32mm Bis.

Arms have approx 20mm room between the axle tube and the bush ring, they retain the 185mm bush seperation at the axle end to keep good axle control.

They have a minimum of 50mm vertical hight though out and from what I can tell should clear;

I’ll make another template this weekend, I want to remove the S shape out of the arm and make it flatter. Also pack some more meat underneath and bring the vertical thickness up to 60- 70mm

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And then using feedback we made a second!

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And a third!
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Arms a consistent 70mm through out now, it clears the chassis on full uptravel.

Roughly layed over the standard arm, I’ve lost some clearance but at least it’s nice and smooth like my brain.

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Did you weld them?
Do you have to preheat/postheat the Bissalloy?
One of my mates who is betterer on the glue gun did and yes,
Chamfered the edges and blazed them on.
The preheat was surprisingly low from their table (50c)
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Highly complex processes here, including man without shoes
 
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One of my mates who is betterer on the glue gun did and yes,
Chamfered the edges and blazed them on.
The preheat was surprisingly low from their table (50c)View attachment 3196079

Highly complex processes here, including man without shoes
Cool. It's interesting stuff.

Spend many days in the shed in bare feet or thongs. Nothing like a bead off the mig getting caught between the toe strap on the double pluggers and your toes to wake you up!!
 
Still trying to wrap my brain around packaging this if I go bellcrank.

One big problem. Fuel

It will need a 4 link, which I just so happen to have brackets from a mates shop that will do that, which means the belly tank cannot be there.

And the shocks and bellcrank will take up space in the rear so a larger tank won’t fit in the back.

Throw me ideas on where to put the fuel no matter how stupid or how to run the arms

Have even thought of parallel upper links and triangulated lowers, 3 links, backwards upper 4 links
 

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