- Local time
- 4:36 AM
- Joined
- May 14, 2011
- Messages
- 18,775
- Reaction score
- 37,555
- Location
- On the Ridge, TN
Patient: 1968 Plymouth GTX "Fred"
Background: Totally stock suspension, drums all around
Condition: ALL drum brake components replaced, yet persistent pulling to left
Symptoms: I've about driven myself (and poor friends like @khryslerkid John) nuts trying to figure out why,
despite my totally rebuilding the entire braking system on Fred, the car insists on pulling left
at times when braking.
It seemingly makes no sense at all, what with the careful selection of all new components, all made in USA....
and the system flushed and bled to death repeatedly.
It has recently occurred to me however - a seemingly unrelated component might actually be the culprit here.
Fred has the stock front sway bar:



A while back, I replaced the links as well as utilized new bar to k-member mounts to the bar,
since all the original rubber was trashed - and whilst doing so, I discovered the bar was "shoved"
over to one side quite a bit before disassembly.
This would be easily explained, the more I thought about it - I had discovered that he had been
in a minor front end collision in his past before me and I had to do some rudimentary repairs to
items behind that shiny bumper as a result, so the bar being pushed over wasn't a shocker either....
(The previous owner had relayed a now almost forgotten story of a long past Friday night bit of
hooliganism, whereby he and his best buddy had been doing burnouts in the doorway of his shop
and Fred, he of always questionable brakes, had gotten away from him and ran into the inside
shop cinderblock wall, explaining the slightly damaged grille and shiny new repop bumper).
Here's the thing that's dawned on me recently though:
When I had that factory bar on the workbench, scrubbing and such....it was obvious it had been
tweaked a bit in whatever collision had occurred, because the ends of the bar did not sit on the bench
equally at rest.
No matter which way I tried it, there was an obvious torquing to the bar - and no amount of my he-manning
on it would straighten it any, it being burly, beefy, springy steel and all...
It wasn't tweaked a lot, but enough to be noticeable.
Duly noted, I re-installed it on Fred with all the new hardware and tried to even it out side to side as best as
I could. Looked ok when done, I thought (see pics).
When the car actually handled noticeably better and didn't pull to one side or the other afterwards, I was pleased
with the efforts.
BUT...
I'm starting to put two and two together here now.
When one hits the brakes, the weight of the car shifts forward a bit of course - which puts the suspension, including
that tweaked sway bar, in compression - and if one side of the bar tends to be higher/lower than the other side and
that situation exascerbates under braking - could this be the source of the pulling?
I'm beginning to think so - because all other possibilities have been exhausted.
Does this make sense to anyone else?
Does anyone have an old factory sway bar they don't need, perhaps?
TIA.
Background: Totally stock suspension, drums all around
Condition: ALL drum brake components replaced, yet persistent pulling to left
Symptoms: I've about driven myself (and poor friends like @khryslerkid John) nuts trying to figure out why,
despite my totally rebuilding the entire braking system on Fred, the car insists on pulling left
at times when braking.
It seemingly makes no sense at all, what with the careful selection of all new components, all made in USA....
and the system flushed and bled to death repeatedly.
It has recently occurred to me however - a seemingly unrelated component might actually be the culprit here.
Fred has the stock front sway bar:



A while back, I replaced the links as well as utilized new bar to k-member mounts to the bar,
since all the original rubber was trashed - and whilst doing so, I discovered the bar was "shoved"
over to one side quite a bit before disassembly.
This would be easily explained, the more I thought about it - I had discovered that he had been
in a minor front end collision in his past before me and I had to do some rudimentary repairs to
items behind that shiny bumper as a result, so the bar being pushed over wasn't a shocker either....
(The previous owner had relayed a now almost forgotten story of a long past Friday night bit of
hooliganism, whereby he and his best buddy had been doing burnouts in the doorway of his shop
and Fred, he of always questionable brakes, had gotten away from him and ran into the inside
shop cinderblock wall, explaining the slightly damaged grille and shiny new repop bumper).
Here's the thing that's dawned on me recently though:
When I had that factory bar on the workbench, scrubbing and such....it was obvious it had been
tweaked a bit in whatever collision had occurred, because the ends of the bar did not sit on the bench
equally at rest.
No matter which way I tried it, there was an obvious torquing to the bar - and no amount of my he-manning
on it would straighten it any, it being burly, beefy, springy steel and all...
It wasn't tweaked a lot, but enough to be noticeable.
Duly noted, I re-installed it on Fred with all the new hardware and tried to even it out side to side as best as
I could. Looked ok when done, I thought (see pics).
When the car actually handled noticeably better and didn't pull to one side or the other afterwards, I was pleased
with the efforts.
BUT...
I'm starting to put two and two together here now.
When one hits the brakes, the weight of the car shifts forward a bit of course - which puts the suspension, including
that tweaked sway bar, in compression - and if one side of the bar tends to be higher/lower than the other side and
that situation exascerbates under braking - could this be the source of the pulling?
I'm beginning to think so - because all other possibilities have been exhausted.
Does this make sense to anyone else?
Does anyone have an old factory sway bar they don't need, perhaps?
TIA.
