Tires are in!

Discussion in 'General Maverick/Comet' started by mashori, Oct 2, 2009.

  1. blugene

    blugene Senior member Supporting Member

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  2. Dave B

    Dave B I like Mavericks!

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    I bought a car that had 245's all around, and you could see where they were rubbing, I couldn't imagine 255's.....
     
    Last edited: Oct 6, 2009
  3. Shorty

    Shorty Member

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    Another temporary fix would be to clamp the front of the leaves. Raise the car until the tires are just touching and then tightly clamp the springs in front of the axle. It will hold the rear of the car up until you can afford add-a-leafs. Don't use air shocks because the shock mount wasn't designed to support the car - trust me, I know.

    Bruce
     
  4. Maverick Man

    Maverick Man The Original Maverick Man

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    looks good dude!

    but man no Shackles please!!!!

    what shocks you got in there? also how old are leaf springs?

    have you tried rolling the fender?

    yep that will help i had those on my car before i put new leafs in.... but really it won't help that much much. on big dips it will still rub.
     
  5. mashori

    mashori Member

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    my leaf springs are old, I really could use newer ones. Isn't there a place to purchase new ones?
     
  6. Bryant

    Bryant forgot more than learned

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    mo, theres a place on magnolia in santee called national spring. they can rearch your current springs or build you new ones. i dont know about the cost. i think that new ones from them will cost more than the ones that people talk about geting on this site. i do have a spare set of stock springs that you can have rearched so you do have as much down time.
     
  7. mashori

    mashori Member

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    I saw them advertised new for 109 each plus 75 for shipping. I really would prefer to get them rearched rather than throw out my old ones and create more waste in the landfill.
     
  8. justin has a 74

    justin has a 74 Maverick bandit official

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    how about the van leaf springs???? that will give you your height too.... i think
     
  9. mashori

    mashori Member

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    You're right, it probably would but I don't have too much time to go hunting through a salvage yard. If I do, I'll definitely look
     
  10. tim keck

    tim keck truckdrivintrailertrash

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    Roll those fender lips! Cheap(free), easy to do. Just take your time. I took a small(3lb) sledge and SLOWLY, GENTLY tapped the lip in around the opening. As long as the car's not full of bondo, or the paints got too much hardner you won't harm the paint on the outside. Go slowly, don't try and bash it all the way up on the first hit. Hold your hand on the outside of the area where you're working, it'll keep the hammer from "bouncing" as much.
     

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