Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 558 Threads: 89
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Location: Deepest darkest Kent
The drag link is made from cold drawn seamless tube. I have made new ones and even a left hand drive one by mistake.
You can save an old one with a worn 1/4" hole by boring it up further and putting a top hat steel pellet in with the 'head' thickness machined to lock the cup in.
Joined: Oct 2017 Posts: 1,541 Threads: 55
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On the original set up the total lost motion is 0.030" to 0.090" which I find requires no improvement.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 620 Threads: 7
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Location: queensland
I have made a new one using seamless tubing from aircraft suppliers. They were able to supply concentric tubing which avoided the task of boring both ends. I do think the result removes a potential fatigue point in the bored out arrangement. I have not heard of cracks in this area but for me it was simpler to manufacture.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 620 Threads: 7
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Location: queensland
Charles I had a look and the inner tube abuts each inner ball joint cup and thus held in place by the through cross bolt. The aircraft tubing is a perfect sliding fit and would take to a plug weld for belt and braces , I did not. Regards Russell
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 2,748 Threads: 31
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Location: Auckland, NZ
It is 10 years since i had one apart and cannot remember. What stops the inner cup fretting on the bolt? Is it a tight fit and clamped by the tube distorting?
Teh shim adjustment is fine if you have a jig to facilitate compressing the assembly for trial and error. I use two long threaded rods and simple end plates.The springs when effective presumably shield the arms from a lot of minor reactions.
Before I learned that new steering arms are avilable I contemplated a belt and braces bracket. But I have since found arms cracked at the turned seat radius..... Which might eventually occur even with replacements if treated brutally..
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 620 Threads: 7
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Location: queensland
The correct bolt has no thread till it emerges and the cup is solid. The cup is a tight fit and difficult to remove, in an earlier thread someone described levering it out from the bolt hole with a small screwdriver.
Joined: Mar 2015 Posts: 5,474 Threads: 231
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Location: Scotchland
It's an absolute bargain and well worth buying - you will most likely want to put the double locking nuts "down the way" at the steering column end though.