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Today was rainy and freezing cold outside. Great weather for working on cars.
So I decided to go ahead and replace the suspension's front springs on the
Austin Healey 100.
The right side spring was sagging (it came that way when I bought the car). It also
has couple of those springs lifts added between the coils, so I knew it had to go.
The car was lower on that side also. I had sent for a pair of Moss Motors springs
and they came with no specification as to its compression in Pounds or Kilograms.
I called them and they didn't have that information either. They just said it was
the same as stock (whatever the spec is).
After doing my due diligence in searching the forums here and elsewhere, I made
the tools suggested by other Austin Healey folks for this task (8" all-threaded rods,
bolts and couplers). This task comes with some serious safety consideration, given
that a compressed spring has a substantial amount of stored energy in it. That
energy has to be slowly dissipated as we undo that tension by unscrewing the
couplers slowly and patiently.
It took me quite a while but I managed to remove it without any problems.
The car was placed on jack stands and also I used a separate jack to raise the
lower A-arm enough as to position it as if the weight of the car was on it.
That makes the lower A-arm nearly horizontal to allow the spring a more vertical
stance. With the suspension just dangling and the spring still under tension, it
seems to be slightly curved.
Notes:
I did not have to remove the sway bar or the brake calipers (yes, this BN2 has
disc brakes). Another thing: When I initially lifted the car to place
it on stands, it was lifted such that the wheel hub was 16.5" off the floor.
Furthermore, the suspension itself was raised 3 more inches to keep the lower
A-arm nearly level. This gave me plenty of clearance for the spring to pop
out easily. The 4 original short bolts had no washers at all, but they used
nuts with nylon inserts (not sure if that is correct). I plan on adding lock
washers when putting it back.
.
So I decided to go ahead and replace the suspension's front springs on the
Austin Healey 100.
The right side spring was sagging (it came that way when I bought the car). It also
has couple of those springs lifts added between the coils, so I knew it had to go.
The car was lower on that side also. I had sent for a pair of Moss Motors springs
and they came with no specification as to its compression in Pounds or Kilograms.
I called them and they didn't have that information either. They just said it was
the same as stock (whatever the spec is).
After doing my due diligence in searching the forums here and elsewhere, I made
the tools suggested by other Austin Healey folks for this task (8" all-threaded rods,
bolts and couplers). This task comes with some serious safety consideration, given
that a compressed spring has a substantial amount of stored energy in it. That
energy has to be slowly dissipated as we undo that tension by unscrewing the
couplers slowly and patiently.
It took me quite a while but I managed to remove it without any problems.
The car was placed on jack stands and also I used a separate jack to raise the
lower A-arm enough as to position it as if the weight of the car was on it.
That makes the lower A-arm nearly horizontal to allow the spring a more vertical
stance. With the suspension just dangling and the spring still under tension, it
seems to be slightly curved.
Notes:
I did not have to remove the sway bar or the brake calipers (yes, this BN2 has
disc brakes). Another thing: When I initially lifted the car to place
it on stands, it was lifted such that the wheel hub was 16.5" off the floor.
Furthermore, the suspension itself was raised 3 more inches to keep the lower
A-arm nearly level. This gave me plenty of clearance for the spring to pop
out easily. The 4 original short bolts had no washers at all, but they used
nuts with nylon inserts (not sure if that is correct). I plan on adding lock
washers when putting it back.
.