They Fail! The real question is why? If I go out and look (or working off of an ever aging on some what unreliable memory) the following reasons come to mind. Old age, heat causing the rubber to degrade. (It is a cool 108 today in an area that has well over 100 days a year of triple digit temperatures), neglect, abuse, a possibility of replacement parts being inferior, and maybe a few other things. Now if I could help answer the question as to why they fail, maybe I could keep the next couple of sets I install from failing prematurely. Tom's web site, excellent as it is, does not cover one area that my suspicious little mind is beginning to raise flags on. Improper installation! I have 3 TSM's, a 1970, a 1974 and a 1980. As the 1st AMC that I owned that I needed to do serious work on is my 1970 Javelin, I never had the need for suspension work directions. My previous to this car AMC experience as a used Rebel and a used Gremlin, both of which were late model used cars and replaced before the suspension caused a problem. One due to a traffic accident and the other due to the BW transmission letting go. No they never did have a reliability reputation. I fixed it and dumped it. In general rust would eliminate your transportation with in 4-5 years of driving. So I bought a TSM and supplement and the parts shown on Toms web site http://wps.com/AMC/Strut-bushing-modern/index.html and found that the 1970 TSM had instructions for the one piece strut rod bushing and a drawing which seemed to show one pregnant washer and one flat washer of the two piece design. This does not cover two pregnant wasjer applications. The new ones were packed however with an instruction sheet that indicated that they fit AMC, Ford and Chrysler applications. There was a time when instructions sheets told you what they fit and how to install them rather than generic platitudes, with a picture of the parts and arrow indicating the direction the strut rod went. However I believe at the time that I was aware that the Ford Strut rod was under tension (the end was mounted at the front bumper) rather than compression (where the end is mounted behind the front wheels as AMC does it) so I mounted the parts this way, Back of car----------------------------Front of car. Pregnant washer) rubber I rubber) pregnant washer ----suspension This was an educated guess on my part thinking about the function of the pregnant washers and IF they were intended to support the rubber at the mounting location and let the pregnant washer be the device that helps keep the rubber from punching through the hole under pressure from the front suspension hitting things it made sense. Until sometime in the future when it finally dawned on me that the second function of the strut rod is to allow movement of the lower control arm in both and up and down fashion (twisting) and an Arc caused by Castor adjustments (is bending a good word) which started me thinking about the purpose of the pregnant washers again. This apparently seems to be the biggest problem Tom has had to solve with his Rambler. Well this and no parts maybe. So I looked at the other two TSM's I now have to see what they showed on replacement configuration. Low and behold they are different, which did not do much in the way of clearing up the problem, but it did cloudy it up quite a bit more. So my question is, looking at the parts, the pregnant washer placed closest to the suspension if placed pregnant side towards the rubber, would allow the rubber to flex with the arc caused by the movement up and down of the lower control arm. This would allow maximum flexibility at the mounting bracket for the suspension to go through it's motions but with the second pregnant washer mounted closest to the transmission with the pregnant side away from rubber would capture the rubber against the mounting bracket for positional stability. Surely looking at the other two TSMs would clarify the situation! Nope, they are all drawn differently. Thus giving me three possible ways to mount the same part plus the directions in the package if any. Going out and looking at the 5 AMC cars in the driveway I find that those that I have rebuilt (3 of the 5) are all put together as described and I really have no problem with them. One which has been rebuilt somewhere in it's life by some one has both pregnant washers facing the rubber and the last one has both pregnant washers facing away from the rubber. As the last two have front end problems and are in need of rebuilding no real evaluation can be made, but as to the correct orientation of the pregnant washers it still remains a mystery. But it makes sense to me if they are not orientated correctly, they can cause problems. If I only knew what correct was for sure! The one piece option though is repetitive in my manuals. The pregnant washer on the suspension side is pregnant towards the rubber. On the transmission side is pregnant towards the transmission. As this part depends on the rubber bulging up to to hold itself in place, the orientation makes sense to me as I see it. Food for thought? Any comments, Does any one have other TSM's and what do they show? Or is their anyone who cares? John. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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