I'd like to blame it on thin air...but...
This is what I found looking for some info on trackbar mount braces. I've always planned one and was getting around to it. This was last August from The Goat, when he had fatigued the metal so badly on his OEM mount that it kept snapping. There are other parts of the thread that suggest the brace transferred the forces to the mount itself.
My memory ain't that bad yet :loveu: . Bracing the mount directly to the opposite frame rail may not be what you want to do, especially to cure what is an inherently loose mount. I like the idea of simply adding a crossmember that attaches in the frame area near the mount and then beefing up the frame around the mount. Or just beef up the frame near the mount and let 'er flex.
But then I don't understand the need for these aftermarket mounts. A heim with high misalignment spacers can operate just fine in the stock postion unless you have some really extreme travel (it doesn't need to be a swingarm with johnny joints). I have about 7" of shock downtravel in my setup, I use regular spacers, and the heim has lasted for years. Buying a bracket that doesn't stay tight so you can run a johnny joint swingarm and have to weld a brace to it...maybe I'm missing something here?
Nay
This is what I found looking for some info on trackbar mount braces. I've always planned one and was getting around to it. This was last August from The Goat, when he had fatigued the metal so badly on his OEM mount that it kept snapping. There are other parts of the thread that suggest the brace transferred the forces to the mount itself.
Goatman said:The whole subject of track bar and steering box braces is far from being resolved. My goal is to make the whole structure as rigid as possible, but it will still flex. I've cracked the frame with and without braces, so don't have any definitive conclusions. I was surprised that the mount fatigued and cracked like it did with the brace, which leads me to believe that the design of the brace somehow contributed to the cracking. Unfortunately, it also cracked before the brace went on, so again, nothing conclusive.
I am going to change the design of the next brace. I think I'll use a rod end on the mount side and a poly bushing on the frame side, rather than making it all rigid like the last one was. This should allow some movement without increasing the stress to the track bar mount. I'm also running a steering box brace, and have a plate added to the inside of the frame, but have no firm opinion on that either. I did see a new crack in the outside of the frame next to the top steering box bolt, so the bumper needs to come off and and some additional repairs made to the outside of the frame. Sort of hard to do now, since my cage structure ties into the bumper from under the fenders.........![]()
My memory ain't that bad yet :loveu: . Bracing the mount directly to the opposite frame rail may not be what you want to do, especially to cure what is an inherently loose mount. I like the idea of simply adding a crossmember that attaches in the frame area near the mount and then beefing up the frame around the mount. Or just beef up the frame near the mount and let 'er flex.
But then I don't understand the need for these aftermarket mounts. A heim with high misalignment spacers can operate just fine in the stock postion unless you have some really extreme travel (it doesn't need to be a swingarm with johnny joints). I have about 7" of shock downtravel in my setup, I use regular spacers, and the heim has lasted for years. Buying a bracket that doesn't stay tight so you can run a johnny joint swingarm and have to weld a brace to it...maybe I'm missing something here?

Nay