- Location
- San Diego
I had issues with the early ruffstuff Heims in my panhard. Lost 3 or 4 in less than a year. Since they replaced the last ones I have not had an issue. Going on about a year with the current ones.
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I will say this for the ballistic joints where they get a thumbs up over the heims...the amount of shank they have is impressive. I wish the heims had that much, but mine should be just fine as it.
Luckily I needed to make another RuffStuff order, as I'm going to keep the front frame side lower control arms at a 9/16" bolt. Why? Well because un-fukking-fortunately I can't get a drill in there to open them up![]()
Also, I don't know what you use for hardware, but get some locknuts for all your suspension bolts (shocks, links, trackbar, etc.) and trash any lockwashers if you're using them. I use the conical top lock nuts on almost everything. I've retorqued stuff after wheeling for a year and never needed to retighten anything. I love them. For general wheeling, I don't see you breaking a good quality grade 8 9/16 bolt as long as it's torqued and doesn't loosen.
get some f-911s for those bolts
Sweet progress dude!
First off, I don't see the need for such a long shank. If you have more than 1" of exposed threads, you're at risk of bending the shank anyway since it's now the weakest point (seen it happen to people). I set up my arms to pretty much bury the heim into them. I could thread them in probably 3-4 threads until they're buried right now.
Also, I don't know what you use for hardware, but get some locknuts for all your suspension bolts (shocks, links, trackbar, etc.) and trash any lockwashers if you're using them. I use the conical top lock nuts on almost everything. I've retorqued stuff after wheeling for a year and never needed to retighten anything. I love them. For general wheeling, I don't see you breaking a good quality grade 8 9/16 bolt as long as it's torqued and doesn't loosen.
Definitely wouldn't hurt to upgrade to at least 5/8" bolts with weld washers at some point in the future, but I wouldn't be in a panic over it.
Yep, get a fine thread bolt with the longest shoulder that will fit without the nut bottoming out on it, use a flat washer on each side, and use a stover nut with red locktite. the bolt should be cut roughly a few threads past the nut.
I won't go with fine thread, several reasons for that given their application. I will be going with stover nuts and some loctite for the final final tighten and torque.
Curious as to why, seeing that fine thread bolts are stronger (larger pitch diameter) and can be torqued higher. I'm by no means an expert, but I am around a fair bit of desert race cars on a daily basis and the general rule of thumb is fine thread unless you're going into aluminum.I won't go with fine thread, several reasons for that given their application. I will be going with stover nuts and some loctite for the final final tighten and torque.
care to elaborate? just curious.
Curious as to why, seeing that fine thread bolts are stronger (larger pitch diameter) and can be torqued higher. I'm by no means an expert, but I am around a fair bit of desert race cars on a daily basis and the general rule of thumb is fine thread unless you're going into aluminum.
makes sense, about the coarse threads dealing with dirty environments easier. fine threads are easier to **** up.
but you are not loading those bolts in shear. you are loading them in tension, which makes a fine thread bolt stronger in this application. if you load those bolts in shear, then you've lost clamp load.
its gonna fold like a taco! .!..!.
Can you elaborate on the locknut deal? Never heard of issues with it.
I've never had an issue with them.
I also think you'll be hard pressed to hurt a 9/16 link bolt. Especially if you're not racing.
I know for sure I haven't been torquing my 5/8 link bolts fully. And I don't run weld washers. And the holes are still fine after a few races.