I am however already rethinking the wheel bearing assembly. I think I will just machine a pivot and use readily available, sealed roller bearings.
ATW modified a few with coils and watts linkage.
mine is parabolics.
its a long time ago ....... I paid a bit of attention to roll centre, roll axis, and centre of mass during box design. The suspension travel, even with a bit extra travel with parabolics, is such that the roll steer with gusty side winds is negligible. With the 4m x 2.1m side of the box on the Canter its more stable in side wind than my '81 Merc car. Slightly related, I haven't felt the need to add steering damper and have no hint of front axle tramp. Articulation is more than adequate for my use.
Its a truck with a floppy chassis, two beam axles, and limited suspension travel.
Nice project, but I guess I'm wondering what problem you are trying to solve.
I assume that you are talking about the centre bearing for the Watts link here... yes?
On my truck (modified by ATW) the centre bearing of the Watts link is a greaseable phosphor-bronze bush. I did think about replacing this with a sealed ball or roller bearing setup, but chose not to do so upon thinking about it further.
The biggest determining factor was that the Watts link had to be unaffected when being submersed in water (fording rivers). As much as you can use seals on either side of the bearings, this is one of the lowest parts on the truck and is prone to a lot of dirt/mud. As I am sure you would be aware, grit and seals are not good bedfellows. The bush solution is, in my opinion, a more robust solution in this situation. Even if the bush is badly worn, it will still function, albeit being a bit noisy.
I did end up replacing the original ATW bush with one that I machined myself. The new bush has slightly closer tolerances and better grease track grooves.
If you're just doing it for the coolness factor and a "cause I can" approach, have at it. It's very clear that you have the design and build skills to make something that can be used in the truck.
I hope you take the following advice in the right spirit, I am not here to offend, argue or say that I know everything about this.
Thanks. No worries!
1. Be advised that the geometry is not as simple as it looks. Symmetric geometry does not equal symmetric roll center migration, or axle shift. There is much more to it than that, one of the issues being that a suspension like this cannot be analysed as a pure kinematic linkage (sorry I cannot discuss further details). The higher the total wheel travel, the more difficult it is to obtain linear characteristics - this might explain your success with track cars which see only a fraction of the travel your off-road truck will want to see.
Admittedly I am not as deep into it as say your average engineering student but I have a decent grasp on it. Help me understand better where you're coming from saying that. My understanding of a watts link tells me it keeps the axle moving up and down in a straight line I imagine until one or both linkages reaches its limit.
2. This brings us to wheel travel. Unless you have over 13-14" of total wheel travel, and are using all of it (think desert race pre-running) you will probably not see any advantage from a watts link. In fact, as I have pointed out above, it is much easier to tune yourself out of the ballpark with a watts than a panhard. This is one reason why its not done on production cars (not just cost).
My main desire for the watts link is the limited space I have to build and install a long enough panhard bar. Describe what you mean by tune myself out of the ballpark. That makes me think of a road race car and making too many changes at once and ruining the handling. It is done on production cars, I wouldn't say it's common though.
- place the center of the Panhard at the desired roll center height. if you're converting a leaf spring vehicle and dont know any better, this height should equal or be 1-1.5" above that of the old spring perches on the axle.
As the height of the original leaf spring perches is unknown to me I was shooting for having the roll center slightly above the front roll center as that is how I have know it to work best usually. That means it's in the typical spot, about 3" above the axle center line. Sounds just like 1-1.5" above the old spring padsWith a panhard bar that limits me to maybe a 24" bar as the frame is in the way.
From extensive (and objective) experience, I'm willing to guarantee that a well-designed Panhard will outperform an average Watts link in terms of ride quality, handling, and of course, durability.
Tell me in what respect it will outperform a watts link? I am not opposed to ditching the watts and I can always try it in the future but I can't imagine any drawback other than complexity.
Yep...Ahh so it's you. I guess I never made the connection.
Not enough miles to give you any real indication, but the heim joints on mine are humungus, so I am guessing that they will go the distance (they use a 1" bolt). Even the guys at ATW admit that these were overkill, but they are unlikely to break.How many miles do you have on your new bushings? Also have you had any wear issues with the heim joints?
I would think that heim joints would better suit this application, but this is definitely not my area of expertise.I have considered them in addition to the boots you can buy to cover them but I feel like the 1 ton chevy tie rod ends are more than strong enough and they are much cheaper than heims.
Cannot tell you that either, as I did not get the specs from the guys at ATW. Should probably put that on my list, as I should have that info myself.Also if you don't mind sharing, what length and rate coil springs are you running?
Yep...
Not enough miles to give you any real indication, but the heim joints on mine are humungus, so I am guessing that they will go the distance (they use a 1" bolt). Even the guys at ATW admit that these were overkill, but they are unlikely to break.
The Watts link bush I replaced showed little to no wear after about 7000KM. Not a lot, I know, but the truck is not finished yet, so it does very few miles currently.
I would think that heim joints would better suit this application, but this is definitely not my area of expertise.
Cannot tell you that either, as I did not get the specs from the guys at ATW. Should probably put that on my list, as I should have that info myself.
Newer Durango comes to mind
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The problem comes under full compression, the track bar would hit the frame. Just no way around that without either putting the bar and roll center really low and or fabbing an oddly shaped bar to reach around the frame
The truck had a panhard bar when I got it but they had notched the frame to allow clearance and I'm not ok with that. It was about 36" long and bent
Yup. Exactly what they did. I patched itFrame notches can be reinforced in other ways unless you're saying they cut off half the section