DougME said:
The rubber snubber attached to the bottom of the axle rides about 1 1/8" above the frame of the car.
Well, you certainly wouldn't want it any closer than that, so the springs sagging is not likely to be the problem. Note that these cars always rode hard compared to a more modern suspension design, it's simply the nature of the beast.
However, the springs may still be causing the harsh ride, if the leaves are rusted together. They have to move to let the spring flex, so enough rust in there makes for essentially no suspension at all.
Removing that front pin isn't a lot of fun, but I've had it out on several TRs now. In fact I'm planning to replace the rear springs in my daily driver soon (when I install the rebuilt axle as well), but haven't yet decided whether to buy new or try a used pair of late TR4 springs that are hanging in the garage.
First thing to do is remove the nut & washer, then soak the entire area in your favorite penetrating oil (PB Blaster is mine, but Kroil works good too), and leave it set. I repeated that, along with some love taps from a BFH (to set up vibration and maybe help the oil penetrate), every few days for several weeks.
There is a tapped hole in the head of the pin (on the inside of the frame rail). IIRC it is 5/16NF. Clean out the threads, first with solvent and then with a bottoming tap.
Get some hardened threaded rod, nuts and heavy flat washers (got mine at
MMC ) plus a heavy socket that will just fit over the head of the pin (and the little tab on the frame that keeps the pin from turning) and an assortment of short (1-2") spacers that will also fit over the pin. Cut a short length (about 4-5") of the threaded rod, and double-nut it to tighten into the hole in the pin. Remove the nuts, lube the threads and add the socket, heavy washer and a nut. Tighten the nut until the head of the pin hits the socket. Then take it all back apart, inspect the threaded rod & nut for damage (I had to replace mine several times), add a spacer and do it again.
If the pin won't move before the rod strips, you can try cutting through the end bushing on the spring and the pin. With the spring out of the way, you can either try again with a new length of threaded rod, or there should be enough room to drill into the pin (which will help loosen it even if you don't drill it out all the way).
Of course this is a project that can quickly go from bad to worse, if you either pull the tube out of the frame or the threads out of the head of the pin. Worst case, you'll need to cut out the old tube (possibly with the old pin still inside it) and weld in a new one along with some reinforcement plates.