The first torsion bar that broke on my 78 was after I'd driven the car across town and back over our very rough streets. I parked the car in the driveway and walked into the house before I head the clatter as the right side torsion bar broke abdout 6 or 8 inches from the back end. The second one broke either 6 or 18 months later...I remember it was in the spring, just not which one. I'd just drove away about a block or less from home on my way to work one morning when the left side bar broke in a very similar location as the other one had previously broken. I replaced that bar when I returned home from work that evening with a bar from my 1976 T&C parts car. Fortunately, a broken torsion bar does not render a 74-78 C body undrivable, just a bit bumpy. You can still steer left and right through the full travel of the steering. I was pretty impressed with this. (this was with P235-75R15 tires) ----- Original Message ----- From: "Burton Bouwkamp" <northburt@xxxxxxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Saturday, July 22, 2006 5:35 PM Subject: IML: Torsion Bar Front Suspension I was a motor and chassis engineer at Chrysler from 1951 to 1962. We (Chrysler) had a problem in northern climates with broken torsion bars on 1957 models after one to two years of service. It was caused by corrosion of the surface of the torsion bar from dirt/salt/moisture accumulating around the bar at the socket cavities (either end). In 1957 we had not adequately sealed the bar ends from exposure and accumulation of this corrosive mud. The problem was the most serious in communities that used salt for snow and ice removal. (We sealed these cavities in 1958, 1959, etc.) Until the seals were available we told our service people to pack these cavities with grease. The corrosive action of the mud attacked the highest stressed part of the bar - the outside surface - causing stress risers which lead to fracture of the bar. A mystery to many of us was why almost all failures happened while the car was parked overnight - and not while the car was in motion. (It must have had something to do with the ambient temperature change overnight.) Burt Bouwkamp ----------------- http://www.imperialclub.com ----------------- This message was sent to you by the Imperial Mailing List. Please reply to mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and your response will be shared with everyone. Private messages (and attachments) for the Administrators should be sent to webmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm