Re: [Chrysler300] torsion bars and sway bars 300 K
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Re: [Chrysler300] torsion bars and sway bars 300 K





There were always police , export , wagon , and HD suspension pieces , brakes , wheels etc etc also for cabs etc . They usually included heavier springs — or in our case thicker torsion bars which are harder to twist —So a stiffer ride. Grandma does not like stiff ride in her Windsor 
The 300’s used those pieces most years , probably all .  Not specific only to a 300 So yes. Generally . Also true on late 60’s muscle cars . Slant six , normal and HD torsion bars ... but not “strut bars “. 
May be part name confusion ? Strut bars have big nut into rubber bushing at front of frame , extend at an angle to locate the lower control arm . Torsion bars under floor turn to hold up the car . Simplistic I know , but over the years have noticed confusion on names . 

Sent from my iPhone not by choice 

On 16 May 2020, at 9:40 am, Jerry Lindsay <jerrylindsay300h@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

I was told once that the torsion bars on a 62’ H were larger than on a sport coupe or Newport. This true????  I’m asking.

 

Jerry Lindsay

 

In beautiful Seminole Florida.

 

From: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of John Grady jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300]
Sent: Saturday, May 16, 2020 9:30 AM
To: Peter Pellicani
Cc: ALLAN POZDOL; charlies@xxxxxxxxxxxx; chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Chrysler300] torsion bars and sway bars 300 K

 

 

Struts have no role in handling in the sense once they locate the control arm against forward impacts and to hold alignment their job is done , thick or thin ( unlike torsion bars or sway  bars ) . They are only loaded axially . But in process of changing those , new rubber bushings and realignment = May bring significant improvements . But cannot be connected to bar thickness . Just sayin   

Sent from my iPhone not by choice 


On 16 May 2020, at 9:16 am, Peter Pellicani pellicaniaerosvc@xxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300] <Chrysler300-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Hello,

 

I have a 1961 Newport and installed the sway bar from a 1963 New Yorker.  You must install the front strut bars also.  They are different.

I don't know how I drove the car without this for 50 years, what a difference!

 

Peter    61 Stick

 

 

On Saturday, May 16, 2020, 09:01:58 AM EDT, charlies@xxxxxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300] <chrysler300-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

 

 

 

Another area you may want to check are the front strut bars. I took a factory sway bar off a 62 Windsor and put it on my 62 Sport 300 which came without a sway bar. The struts in the Windsor were of a larger diameter.

Charlie in Ottawa

 

 

On 2020-05-15 9:02 pm, ALLAN POZDOL apozdol@xxxxxxxxxxx [Chrysler300] wrote:

 

 

I notice in the parts book that there are two different grades of torsion bars, one pair with and the other without the sway bar. I am going to be installing a sway bar on my 64 K  VC2 with the 610/611 bars.

 

Ha anyone had occasion to have installed a sway bar on anything other than the 300 K ram with the performance suspension upgrade installed? And own or driven a ram car with the with the performance suspension upgrade factory installed?  These bars are the 606/607 heavy duty. Is there a noticeable difference?

 

My front end is now apart is why I ask, so now would be the time to make any change.

 

Curios, the parts catalog shows the 606/607 heavy duty available for the 1964 Plymouth/Dodge models as well.

 

Thanks!

 

Al

 



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Posted by: John Grady <jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>


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