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Bugsy Rides Again - Yahoo!!!!

To: spridgets-digest@autox.team.net
Subject: Bugsy Rides Again - Yahoo!!!!
Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2003 06:49:01 -0700 (PDT)
Thanks to all for their help. After almost 3 hours of standing on my hear 
trying to drill out a broken bolt on the front rear spring mount bracket I can 
report success. Bugsy now sports new rear spring mounting brackets, all new 
bushing, all new hardware and I can't believe I'm driving the same car. I was 
having trouble with the rear axle shifting on turns and in big bumps. Driving 
was challenging to say the least. Found that the DPO had reassembled car with 
wrong sized, too small bolts into spring mount bracket from inside car behind 
seats. Over time this allowed mount to become loose and wear a V shaped groove 
in the DS Spring Mount that was 3/4-1" long. Whole axle was shifting during 
cornering, and at time felt like it was going to come around rear end first. 
Here's some tips I learned from the almost 3 days trying to get Bugsy back 
together.
 
1) Lots of Liquid Wrench on Spring Mount Brackets in advance.
2) 2 of the bolts cannot be reached from above with Liquid Wrench. Do not use 
an Impact Wrench on these bolts. I spent 3 hours on my back drilling one of 
these bastard out and retapping the hole. There is more than 1" of steel to 
drill through and I don't want to ever do that again.
3) Use torch first on these bolts followed with long breaker bar. An impact 
wrench turned up to full power will snap this bolt off.
4) Take Springs to spring shop to get bushings pressed out. They rust in place 
and not something you can easily do at home.
5) It is possible to turn springs around backwards and they do not fit. One 
side measures 17" to center the other 19".
6) New bushings can be removed not by pounding but by using a screwdriver at 
the edge of the rolled spring edge and pry a little to open up the rolled edge. 
Bushing fell right out.
7) A vise can be used to press in new bushings. Clean up inside of bushing hole 
with Dremel Tool and Wire Brush before reassembly. 
8) Spring mounts from VB are too wide on the captive nut side to install on a 
'68 Sprite without grinding more than 3/8" off the side of the captive nut. 
Easy to do but a PITA. Maybe they fit other year Spridgets but I doubt it. 
9) A scissors jack from my old Honda positioned between brake drum and inside 
of rear wheel well will move axle back and up while a floor jack under spring 
will allow you to lift up and align everything. Loosening the shock bolts allow 
lower plate to be aligned without taking off the nut from shock to spring arm.
10) I had spring shop rearch the DS Spring so at rest it stands 1" taller that 
the PS spring. I can report that Bugsy's liberal tendencies have been reduced 
to 1/2" as measured at the rear fenderwell from more that 1" before hand. Not 
sure if springs will keep the rearching over time but visually Bugsy looks 
better at rest.  
 
All in all, a bastard of a job that would have been fairly easy if bolt had not 
snapped off. Bugsy is happy, really happy and for the first time since he came 
home on a flatbed in October 2 years ago I can say I've finally had a 
satisfying Spridget experience.  


Jim Gruber
Bugsy '68 Sprite (future Bugeye in disguise)
Dayton, OH

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