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The sway bar on my TR6 has really long pivot arms coming down from the suspension bracket. So long that I have often gazed under the car and wonder when I will hit something with them. The labels are still on these arms and they came from one of the vendors. All I can read is "made in UK" so they must've been for a British car. I purchased a replacement kit from TRF and see, happily, that the pivot arms are 1.5" shorter than what I had. Exactly what I wanted. Here comes the kicker. Installing the new sway bar to the skid plate is a hideous procedure, anyone can see Tinster's posts and see that. The nuts holding the u-bolts that embrace the actual sway bar can only be accessed by either removing the radiator (THAT I can do without) or dropping the skid plate. And that cannot be done. They came with hidden nuts holding the skid plate and this is only accessible by, you guessed it, removing the radiator. And, in my case, my oil cooler.
Question, the new sway bar is the exact same thickness as the old one. The old one told me that it really didn't want to be removed and I agreed with it. But, the new bar is 3/4" wider overall than the old one. The new pivot arms look like they are perfectly happy being attached to the old sway bar. I think I answered my own question, not gonna go crazy and rebuild the front of the car. Oh, the question. Anybody see anything wrong using shorter pivots on an old bar? I guess when I drop the car I can road test and see if it acts squirrelly.
It's all your fault, Tinster.
Question, the new sway bar is the exact same thickness as the old one. The old one told me that it really didn't want to be removed and I agreed with it. But, the new bar is 3/4" wider overall than the old one. The new pivot arms look like they are perfectly happy being attached to the old sway bar. I think I answered my own question, not gonna go crazy and rebuild the front of the car. Oh, the question. Anybody see anything wrong using shorter pivots on an old bar? I guess when I drop the car I can road test and see if it acts squirrelly.
It's all your fault, Tinster.