I am not sure all of the following is correct; Snip I meant that on the '82 Spirit, the wheel wells are shallower than the Eagle, so if my friend put an XJ axle in (which is 2" wider) with XJ rims (to tuck the tires further in) in the "normal" Spirit axle position (axle on top of springs) the tires may still stick out past the wheel well openings and/or hit the fender lip or top. Eagles got around this issue with fender flares and the axle under the springs (which gave it 4" of lift too) Snip If my some what aging memory is not overly faulty it seemed to me that the Eagle had to be lifted to allow all of the four wheel drive mechanics fit under the chassis. This was the primary reason for lifting although at the time 4 wheel drive vehicles had more ground clearance than 2 wheel drive vehicles so that may have been a supporting reason too. But it seems to me that it had to be raised to get stuff to fit. Once raised it looked silly, sort of like a Concord driving around on stilts so the fender flares were incorporated along with the ground affects to fill in the gap between the fender openings and the wheels and to visually lower the car. I could be wrong, but it does not seem to me that the flares were added to enhance the use of wider axles or tires. The 1980 product and information hand book lists 15 inch wheels as standard equipment on the Eagle only and not available on other models. Although the 1980 AMC TSM lists the tread width front @59.6 inches and rear @57.6 inches while a Concord is 58.4 inches front and rear is 57.5 The rear numbers are almost identical (these are for a 4 door) which to me implies pretty much standard interchangeable parts and the difference between 14 and 15 inch wheels maybe. The front differences could be for a lot of reasons but probably to give room to get the 4whd parts out to the front wheels. 1.2 inches or .6 inches per side does not seem very big looking at it this way. I am sure the flares allowed some latitude in wheel size and width for aftermarket but out of the factory I sure believe they were there to foster the allusion of being lower to the ground. For what it's worth. John. _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com