Ah! But! Snip But, we are talking about an XJ rear diff and not an Eagle one into the Spirit. That narrow width may be for the SX4 and not the Eagle wagon/sedans. The flares were added (and required) to cover the tires from throwing stuff onto the vehicle behind them. Front suspension was lifted to make it 4x4 because that was the closest they could get to the oil pan with a diff and have the axles level. Snip The tread widths I referred to were Concord Sedan to Eagle Sedan so one could make (hopefully) an apples to apples comparison. Thus suggesting that on the rear of the Eagle Sedan and the Rear of the Concord sedan there was no need for the flares if the object of them was to keep the tires from throwing road grunge onto the sides of the car or the car behind them. Much the same that a low rider does now with the extremely widely spaced wire wheels and the comically narrow rubber tires ;-) And as you point out the object of the lift was to fit the front suspension under the engine which was relocated anyway a bit and the floor pan modified to clear the bell housing, xfer case and transmission leaving you with front seats that would not interchange between the two cars, however that is a different story. So if you have to lift the front, you there for have to lift the rear to level the car out some what anyway. Which brings back to the point I was trying to bring up. I believe the purpose of the flares were to fill in the gaps between the now raised body and the tires and ground to give the allusion of being lower to the ground as a cosmetic function pretty much only. The rear tread on a Spirit and an AMX was 57 inches in 1980. I do not have a figure for an SX4 but the 2 door, 4 door and wagon for the Eagle was 57.6 inches. The AMX of course had flares also. Supposedly I guess to cover the performance oriented rear tires which were the same tires as offered on the regular Spirit thus when so equipped looked a little funky by them self as they sort of stood out from the fenders a little like Prince Charles ears. The Standard tire for a Spirit in 1980 I believe was a P195/ 75 R 14. Even with the optional Tire of DR70 14 which I believe came with the magnum 500 style wheels, the tire did not project far enough out from the rear fenders to require the flares which were standard on the AMX. The optional optional tire of ER60 -14 for the AMX using the "Dukes of Hazard turbine type wheels filled up the wheel wells well enough to make the flare look functional. On my AMX, I am using P205 -70 -14's and the fit is still under the fender using the OEM syle Magnum 500 wheels. While on my Spirit I am using P245-60 - R 14's on aftermarket aluminum wheels and the fit nicely under the fender well with no rubbing anywhere and I do travel with the car heavily loaded when Valerie and I make a road trip as her mobility scooter is carried with us in the car. The point is there is plenty of room under the fender well for some very large wheel and tire combinations. The AMX Flare option really is strictly cosmetic for the most part but looks better with bigger wheels and tire fitted. Thus I would imagine the SX4 Eagle flare would be basically the same way. Not needed for flinging grung but needed to give the allusion the car was not raised. Thus I am suggesting maybe that with the wider axle you are contemplating installing one might take a look at Carvan wheels and tires which have a fairly deep offset that would space the wheel back towards the center of the car. I have a set of 16 inch with a tire mounted, I don't off hand remember the size of the tire but standard for a 1996 town and country. I also have a set of 15 inch Bronco wheels with a 75 series tire mounted and a 70 series tire mounted that are now on my Town and Country. The off set is not as great with these wheels but all of them mount on an AMC hub. (with minor modifications to the Bronco wheels). I would bet that one of these combinations would allow you to mount the axle in question with out having the need to raise the car up so the fenders would clear the wheels and they would fit inside the existing wheel well the negating the need to install Eagle Flares to cover the protruding wheels or what ever. If this is an experiment in what fits I would be glad to take measurements with any and all wheel combinations I have and feed them back or !!!!! you could buy a set of wire wheel hub caps, let the wheels hang out anyway and get a chrome chain steering wheel and when you drive the car, slouch so you can just see over the dash board and under the steering wheel. ;-) My thoughts on the subject anyway. Later 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