Bill. Think "Neoprene in shear" or "Compothane in shear". T
hey are not really bushings that rotate, but are immobile. Suspension
travel on the bushing end of the control arms occurs within the rubber
component, not around the bolts and nuts. They are clamped tightly between
the ears of the locating tabs.
Jim Hupy
On Sun, Sep 23, 2018, 1:46 PM Bill Van Vlack
wrote:
> Thank you Les... I do want to have it done correctly. I'll have to
> negotiate the measure/lift/measure routine with the caveat that when it
> fails and
> if I can't drive it between alignments after that exercise, I'll go
> somewhere else. Hopefully I can find a shop that agrees.
>
> Curious what components are subject to hysteresis, compliance, etc.
> ...Bushings, torsion bars, shocks, any/all of these or others?
>
> I assume the upper control arms are 'normalized' when they're loosened to
> adjust. And if the coach is pulled down to correct ride height and then
> adjusted, why won't the adjustments stay the same after a drive (assuming
> it returns to correct ride height after a drive).
> --
> Bill Van Vlack
> '76 Royale; Guemes Island, Washington; Twin bed, full (DS) side bath,
> Brazilian Redwood counter and settee tops,455, 6KW generator; new owner a/o
> mid
> November 2015.
>
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