Thread: panhard bar
-
02-15-2015 08:25 AM #1
panhard bar
I have heard it Yes and No about having to have a Panhard bar when using leaf springs on the rear. What do think, do you need a Bar when you have 2 rear leaf springs?
Thanks for your inputs.
-
Advertising
- Google Adsense
- REGISTERED USERS DO NOT SEE THIS AD
-
02-15-2015 08:40 AM #2
Navy,
Unless you've got long shackles that create a flex point I wouldn't think that a panhard bar would do anything for you with parallel leaf springs, and in fact if done with Heim ends a panhard bar will actually [U]cause[U] some lateral movement of the differential on up/down travel. If your shackles are short and not thin, flimsy material I'd opt for no bar. If you feel that you need something, a Watts Link is probably a better choice.Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
-
02-15-2015 01:01 PM #3
A well engineered and implemented panhard bar with leaf springs works very well. Jeep YJ's and Ford Superduty's utilize leaf spring / panhard bar suspensions OEM from the factory.John Kickin' It "Old School" From The High Plains of Colorado
-
02-15-2015 01:56 PM #4
Jeeps, off road, big trucks and hard cornering Mustangs, I can see the point of a Panhard bar . . . but on a 40 Ford pickup street rod? Not so much.Jack
Gone to Texas
-
02-15-2015 02:20 PM #5
Like Jack says, if you're planning to do this.....
jeep_yj_wrangler_articulation.jpgRoger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
-
02-15-2015 05:01 PM #6
Not at all. If you wanted to do some serious cornering in a street rod with leaf springs there's nothing wrong with a panhard bar. I agree a watts link would be better, but it's really overcomplicated and over used for most applications.
.John Kickin' It "Old School" From The High Plains of Colorado
How much did Santa have to pay for his sleigh? Nothing! It's on the house! .
the Official CHR joke page duel