Tonight was an historic evening.  Not only did I receive my Heritage Motor 
certificate on my car, (made June 22, 1968, shipped July 3, 1968, My birthday, 
July 3, 1968) but I was actually going to be putting parts back on my car 
instead of always taking them off.  
If you recall from my last episode, I had used fire to help remove the trailing 
arm bushings.  After using a wire wheel and my drill to  clean out the crud in 
the mount holes, I pressed in the new, two-halves polyurethane bushings and 
inserted the metal sleeve.  I then squeezed the mounting points into the 
brackets, and tightened the mounting bolts to the appropriate ft lbs.  In 
tightening the mounting bolts, I squeezed the brackets against the sleeve 
without compressing the poly-u bushings at all.  The trailing arm moved easily 
up and down with minimal resistance.  
Is this correct or do I need to shorten the metal sleeves so that the brackets 
compress the bushings?  I think what I did is correct, but I just expected a 
limited range of motion in the trailing arms with the tension appropriately 
torqued.  Please help so I can continue to put parts back on.  I have a freshly 
painted differential (black front, aluminium cover) that will look great 
mounted on my nice, clean frame.  
Andy
CD6521L
 
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