triumphs
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Re: [TR] Vertical link repair questions

To: "'Jeffrey Gayton'" <jtgayton@icloud.com>, <triumphs@autox.team.net>
Subject: Re: [TR] Vertical link repair questions
From: "Randall" <TR3driver@ca.rr.com>
Date: Sun, 11 Jan 2015 22:51:58 -0800
Delivered-to: mharc@autox.team.net
Delivered-to: triumphs@autox.team.net
Thread-index: AdAuIvPuQsGL7BqYQDiNQ1h1ZdZZQwAC+7Ug
> It appears I'll need to 
> remove the damper and spring, but I'm having trouble there. 
> The workshop manual makes removal of the damper seem simple, 
> but I can't even see the nut they say to remove at the bottom 
> (p 4-107) because there are a lot of other parts in the way. 

Yup, and they have to come off.  Unless I am forgetting something (been a long 
time since I took a TR4 apart), the manual has the
sequence out of order.  Here's the way I do it on TR3/A (which I think should 
work on TR4).

Find a way to lift the spring pan a bit (I use a floor jack and a piece of 2x4 
on edge, just inside of the trunnion), then undo the
two bolts (#27 in Fig 5) that hold the lower rebound stop bracket (#27) to the 
frame.  I have been known to just drive them out
without lifting the pan, but that does some damage to the bracket and bolts.  
Remove the jack (or whatever) and the bracket if it
didn't just fall off.

Now you should be able to see or feel the four nuts (#79 in Fig 6) that hold 
the upper bracket (#81) to the spring pan. Remove the
nuts, along with the two at the top of the damper (#69 and 71 in Fig 6).  Then 
you should be able to pry the lower damper mount
downward off of the studs (forcing the bracket off if it didn't fall off by 
itself); and remove the damper.

Now, you'll need the magic spring compressor tool.  About $50 at the big three 
(last time I looked), or not too hard to fabricate
yourself.  Here's a photo of mine (which is quite a bit beefier than it needs 
to be):
<http://s258.photobucket.com/user/TR3driver/media/Tools/Springcompressor.jpg.html>
But don't (IMO) try to use one of the general purpose ones.  You want the 
Triumph-specific tool.

Tighten the compressor until the arms are horizontal or a bit higher, then undo 
the bolts & nuts that hold the spring pan to the
lower A-arms (er, wishbones).  I don't bother with the guide pins or the block 
of wood mentioned in the book, but they certainly
won't hurt anything.  Now start undoing the compressor until the spring pan 
hits the frame, lift the wishbones up to disengage the
studs (if necessary) and pull on the spring compressor to move the pan off the 
frame.  Continue undoing the compressor and the pan,
spring and other bits should just fall out.  You might have to pry a bit on the 
spacer above the spring (if your car has one) and
the pad above it.

-- Randall  


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